1. Primary purposes. A lessor must determine in each case if the
leased property will be used primarily for personal, family, or household
purposes. If a question exists as to the primary purpose for a lease,
the fact that a lessor gives disclosures is not controlling on the
question of whether the transaction is covered. The primary purpose
of a lease is determined before or at consummation and a lessor need
not provide Regulation M disclosures where there is a subsequent change
in the primary use.
2. Period of time. To be a consumer lease, the initial term of
the lease must be more than four months. Thus, a lease of personal
property for four months, three months or on a month-to-month or week-to-week
basis (even though the lease actually extends beyond four months)
is not a consumer lease and is not subject to the disclosure requirements
of the regulation. However, a lease that imposes a penalty for not
continuing the lease beyond four months is considered to have a term
of more than four months. To illustrate:
i. A three-month lease extended on a month-to-month
basis and terminated after one year is not subject to the regulation.
ii. A month-to-month
lease with a penalty, such as the forfeiture of a security deposit
for terminating before one year, is subject to the regulation.
3. Total contractual
obligation. The total contractual obligation is not necessarily
the same as the total of payments disclosed under section 1013.4(e).
The total contractual obligation includes nonrefundable amounts a
lessee is contractually obligated to pay to the lessor, but excludes
items such as:
i. Residual value amounts or purchase-option
prices;
ii. Amounts
collected by the lessor but paid to a third party, such as taxes,
licenses, and registration fees.
6-5565.5
4. Credit sale. The regulation does not cover
a lease that meets the definition of a credit sale in Regulation Z,
12 CFR 226.2(a)(16), which is defined, in part, as a bailment or lease
(unless terminable without penalty at any time by the consumer) under
which the consumer:
i. Agrees to pay as compensation for use
a sum substantially equivalent to, or in excess of, the total value
of the property and services involved; and
ii. Will become (or has the option to become),
for no additional consideration or for nominal consideration, the
owner of the property upon compliance with the agreement.
5. Agricultural purpose. Agricultural purpose means a purpose related to the production,
harvest, exhibition, marketing, transportation, processing, or manufacture
of agricultural products by a natural person who cultivates, plants,
propagates, or nurtures those agricultural products, including but
not limited to the acquisition of personal property and services used
primarily in farming. Agricultural products include horticultural,
viticultural, and dairy products, livestock, wildlife, poultry, bees, forest
products, fish and shellfish, and any products thereof, including
processed and manufactured products, and any and all products raised
or produced on farms and any processed or manufactured products thereof.
6. Organization or other
entity. A consumer lease does not include a lease made to an
organization such as a corporation or a government agency or instrumentality.
Such a lease is not covered by the regulation even if the leased property
is used (by an employee, for example) primarily for personal, family
or household purposes, or is guaranteed by or subsequently assigned
to a natural person.
7. Leases of personal property incidental to a service. The following
leases of personal property are deemed incidental to a service and
thus are not subject to the regulation:
i. Home entertainment systems requiring
the consumer to lease equipment that enables a television to receive
the transmitted programming.
ii. Security alarm systems requiring the
installation of leased equipment intended to monitor unlawful entries
into a home and in some cases to provide fire protection.
iii. Propane gas service where
the consumer must lease a propane tank to receive the service.
8. Safe deposit
boxes. The lease of a safe deposit box is not a consumer lease
under section 1013.2(e).
9. Threshold amount. A consumer lease is exempt from the requirements
of this part if the total contractual obligation exceeds the threshold
amount in effect at the time of consummation. The threshold amount
in effect during a particular time period is the amount stated in
comment 2(e)-11 for that period. The threshold amount is adjusted
effective January 1 of each year by any annual percentage increase
in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers
(CPI-W) that was in effect on the preceding June 1. Comment 2(e)-11
will be amended to provide the threshold amount for the upcoming year
after the annual percentage change in the CPI-W that was in effect
on June 1 becomes available. Any increase in the threshold amount
will be rounded to the nearest $100 increment. For example, if the
annual percentage increase in the CPI-W would result in a $950 increase
in the threshold amount, the threshold amount will be increased by
$1,000. However, if the annual percentage increase in the CPI-W would
result in a $949 increase in the threshold amount, the threshold amount
will be increased by $900. If a consumer lease is exempt from the
requirements of this part because the total contractual obligation
exceeds the threshold amount in effect at the time of consummation,
the lease remains exempt regardless of a subsequent increase in the
threshold amount.
10. No increase in the CPI-W. If the CPI-W in effect on June 1 does
not increase from the CPI-W in effect on June 1 of the previous year,
the threshold amount effective the following January 1 through December
31 will not change from the previous year. When this occurs, for the
years that follow, the threshold is calculated based on the annual
percentage change in the CPI-W applied to the dollar amount that would
have resulted, after rounding, if decreases and any subsequent increases
in the CPI-W had been taken into account.
i. Net increases. If the resulting amount calculated, after rounding, is greater than
the current threshold, then the threshold effective January 1 the
following year will increase accordingly.
ii. Net decreases. If the resulting amount calculated, after rounding, is equal to
or less than the current threshold, then the threshold effective January
1 the following year will not change, but future increases will be
calculated based on the amount that would have resulted.
11. Threshold. For
purposes of section 1013.2(e)(1), the threshold amount in effect during
a particular period is the amount stated below for that period.
i. Prior to July 21, 2011, the threshold
amount is $25,000.
ii. From July 21, 2011 through December 31, 2011, the threshold amount
is $50,000.
iii. From
January 1, 2012 through December 31, 2012, the threshold amount is
$51,800.
iv. From January
1, 2013 through December 31, 2013, the threshold amount is $53,000.
v. From January 1, 2014 through
December 31, 2014, the threshold amount is $53,500.
vi. From January 1, 2015 through December
31, 2015, the threshold amount is $54,600.
vii. From January 1, 2016 through December
31, 2016, the threshold amount is $54,600.
viii. From January 1, 2017 through December
31, 2017, the threshold amount is $54,600.
ix. From January 1, 2018 through December
31, 2018, the threshold amount is $55,800.
x. From January 1, 2019 through December
31, 2019, the threshold amount is $57,200.
xi. From January 1, 2020 through December
31, 2020, the threshold amount is $58,300.
xii. From January 1, 2021 through December
31, 2021, the threshold amount is $58,300.
xiii. From January 1, 2022 through December
31, 2022, the threshold amount is $61,000.
xiv. From January 1, 2023 through December
31, 2023, the threshold amount is $66,400.
xv. From January 1, 2024 through December
31, 2024, the threshold amount is $69,500.