Polestar's Subscription Rental Scheme Will Be The First Of Dozens

Polestar might just have pioneered the next big shift in car buying behaviour. Its subscription programme for the Polestar 1 takes advantage of the modern consumer's biggest weakness: convenience
Polestar's Subscription Rental Scheme Will Be The First Of Dozens

Polestar’s cars aren’t the only thing about the brand that’s unusual. We touched briefly on the subscription sales model when we brought you the Polestar 1’s reveal, but now’s the time to look closer.

First things first: it won’t be the same as leasing, despite it being based on equal monthly payments over two to three years before handing the car back. Polestar’s idea is basically the same one used by Netflix and Spotify. You simply sign up with no deposit and then pay your bill every month. The one difference is that Polestar’s has an end date, whereas Spotify will quite happily keep taking your money forever until you cancel.

Polestar's Subscription Rental Scheme Will Be The First Of Dozens

This is an all-inclusive subscription, covering all necessary maintenance and servicing – including the cost of the man (or woman) who comes to fetch it and return it either side of its service. It mirrors Volvo’s concierge programme, giving authorised staff a one-time use code on their smartphone that lets them into your vehicle, so you won’t even have to hand it over yourself. We’re not sure how we feel about that, especially if the car comes back with scratches or an upturned hotdog on the passenger seat, but I digress.

It’s a modern business model for modern buyers. It’s likely to be more expensive than traditional ways of buying a car, but it’s minimal hassle. Convenience is king, these days, and for those ‘buyers’ who have the money, that degree of car ownership convenience will make the Polestar 1 seem more luxurious than just about anything else this side of a Rolls-Royce.

Polestar's Subscription Rental Scheme Will Be The First Of Dozens

Naturally, Polestar hasn’t hit us with numbers yet, but the monthly subscription for a new one will be a fat four-figure wedge of cash. There’ll be a secondary subscription option when the car is two or three years old, too. When it gets to five or six years old, it’ll most likely be sold outright.

Of course, people should be able to buy one outright from new if they insist. It’ll cost around £130,000, and some collectors might choose to pay that and whack the car straight into a climate-controlled warehouse. Polestar’s chief operating officer, Jonathan Goodman, told Cnet that:

“I think it would be very difficult to me to turn around to a customer who walks in with a ‘hundred-and-x thousand dollars’ and says, ‘I want to buy one.’ I think I’m not particularly convinced that I’ll be turning them away and saying, ‘Absolutely not, sir or madam. You have to have it on subscription.’ I think subscription is going to be a key part of it.”

Polestar's Subscription Rental Scheme Will Be The First Of Dozens

Insurance doesn’t seem to be covered as part of the deal, and obviously you’ll still need to fuel and charge it at your own expense. Ordering, on the other hand, is simple. It’s an online-only system.

Several mainstream brands have also started moving towards an online car sales model, which removes the potential for haggling money off and, ultimately, cuts dealership overheads. Peugeot has even offered its ‘Just Add Fuel’ scheme, where every cost, from servicing to road tax and insurance is all included in one monthly payment.

Polestar's Subscription Rental Scheme Will Be The First Of Dozens

There’s no doubt it’s more convenient, and it’s easy to argue that these days we’re lazier than we used to be. You can order the car while sitting in your Calvin Kleins on the sofa, if you want, there’s no deposit to find and you know what’s coming out of your (in this case) deep, deep pockets every month. In short, it’s never going to be the cheapest choice, but it’s sure as hell the easiest.

‘Easy’ sells. The next generation of car buyers are used to monthly subscriptions for their music, their television and their phones. Subscriptions make it easy, and you can bet your life – even bet your beloved car – that we’ll be seeing more subscription-based renting schemes in the near future.

Comments

KPS Lucky - Inactive

Polestar showing off their new car and renting/buying methods. Hats off to them.

10/22/2017 - 06:17 |
28 | 4
Roadster / Tail Red

But it’s still the same thing as private lease…

10/22/2017 - 06:26 |
62 | 0

That is a private lease, but unlike a private lease Volvo is the owner…

10/22/2017 - 07:54 |
12 | 2

No it’s not. Didn’t you read the article? They said it was different, there for it must be different!

10/22/2017 - 15:59 |
4 | 2
5:19.55

Back in the days, lazyness was cured by a stick located between the driver seat and the passenger one

10/22/2017 - 06:51 |
90 | 0

this deserves more upvotes

10/23/2017 - 05:19 |
2 | 0

These days there’s autonomy to help “solve” it

10/23/2017 - 12:48 |
0 | 0
FUGL_S60 (Tesla Lover 800)

I might be wrong but I think I heard that it has no key and your phone is the key. You can share the car with others. But it’s still BS. We need a manual key! What if your phone stops working in a way you can’t get it to start again at the moment and your 130 miles away from home with pouring rain outside. You also left your umbrella in the car and can’t get inside. Your brain is debating
A) Break into the car
B) Fling a middle finger in the air and yell; “F#ck Polestar!“
C) Lie down, try not to cry, cry a lot!

10/22/2017 - 06:52 |
40 | 0

Exactly. Manufacturers NEED to stop throwing in needless technology without assessing the benefit (in this case very little) and the potential cost (easier to hack, relies on the phone so easier to get locked out). Asking these simple questions before implementing some gadgets would save people a whole lot of grief.

10/22/2017 - 08:03 |
32 | 2

There’s still a key, Tesla is the one that’s doing no key

11/03/2017 - 02:23 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I want to actually own the car. Not rent it for a few years and give it back to manufacturer, in this case Polestar.

10/22/2017 - 08:03 |
12 | 0
TheRealBouss

I see many, many problems in this. But it is a step in the right direction

10/22/2017 - 08:48 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

And that is why there will be a lesser amount of cars than Mercedes, Bentley and Rolls Royce. Its a Volvo, its a 4 cylinder and it is a lease.

10/22/2017 - 09:25 |
2 | 0
DL🏁

As a car guy, I like being the owner of my car.

Yes, I might be able to get a more expensive car through financing or some sort of subscription thing, but in that case, it will be owned by someone else, even if that’s just on paper.
I much prefer to know that my car is an asset and not a liability, and if I’m ever in need of money, the car can come in handy. Whereas if its financed - I’m just putting myself in more debt. I like the fact that I’m the only person legally allowed to drive the car on public roads (ok, with some exceptions, e.g. service people) and that I can virtually do whatever I want with it - I can turn up to a local workshop and bolt on the stupidest ricer wing on it (not that I would) and no one would have the right to object. And so on.

So ye, subscription and most forms of financing make sense for people who see their car as means for getting from A to B. But personally, I’d rather save up for a cheaper car and own it outright, even if it doesn’t make financial sense and I’m going to lose money on depreciation and so on.

10/22/2017 - 10:05 |
40 | 0

THANK YOU

10/23/2017 - 16:56 |
2 | 0

This. Also someone who is going to be interested in a Polestar probably isnt the kind of person who just sees a car as a way to get from A to B, so probably wrong “audience” to test this sales model.

12/14/2017 - 16:35 |
2 | 0
Tomislav Celić

What? Will we like, rent our phones in the future? Rent the kitchen when we need it? Rent a TV? IMO renting is dumb, and buying what you need is much better.

10/22/2017 - 10:12 |
18 | 0

I agree. It also means no more tuning, since you don’t own the car. That sucks.

10/22/2017 - 11:12 |
8 | 0

Something that we agree on. Thats a first.

10/23/2017 - 16:57 |
0 | 0
Danny S

This is so wasteful. They’re essentially designing the cars to be disposable products. Once the warranty is up, the cars will just get recycled and the customer will get the latest model. But Volvo aren’t the only ones, almost all car manufacturers today design their cars to pretty much die at the end of the warranty period. Unlike 40+ years ago, when cars were built to last. And unless companies start reducing the amount of technology they put in cars, this is never going to change.

10/22/2017 - 13:01 |
14 | 2

Obsolescence has been around since the 30’s since Ford’s competitors came up with it anyway. Weave had that coming for quite some while now. Saying ‘it was better back then’ isn’t quite true

10/22/2017 - 15:11 |
2 | 0

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