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These models shift financial risk to consumers while preserving platform control for Sony. Combined with digital-only consoles, DRM, subscription-gated functionality, and restrictions on repair or resale, leasing further weakens the consumer's right to own, repair, resell, or preserve purchased products. The net effect is a structural move away from ownership toward access-based consumption that prioritizes vendor control over consumer rights.
These models shift financial risk to consumers while preserving platform control for Sony. Combined with digital-only consoles, DRM, subscription-gated functionality, and restrictions on repair or resale, leasing further weakens the consumer's right to own, repair, resell, or preserve purchased products. The net effect is a structural move away from ownership toward access-based consumption that prioritizes vendor control over consumer rights.
==Incidents==
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{{Main|link to the main article}}Short summary of the incident (could be the same as the summary preceding the article).
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==See also==
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Latest revision as of 14:27, 14 March 2026

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PlayStation Lease with Flex
Basic Information
Release Year 2026
Product Type Electronics leasing
In Production Yes
Official Website https://www.playstation.com/

Lease with Flex is an electronics leasing service launched in 2026 by Sony, in partnership with Raylo for its PlayStation hardware. Advertised on the PlayStation Direct website, the service allows users in the UK to lease consoles and accessories on flexible monthly terms or fixed 12–36-month plans with no upfront cost.

Consumer-impact summary

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It is not clearly stated on the official leasing pages that PlayStation Plus subscriptions are included within these leasing or financing agreements. As a result, consumers may be required to pay ongoing subscription fees on top of monthly hardware payments to access online multiplayer, cloud saves, and other platform features. This increases the effective total cost of use beyond the advertised monthly price and undermines transparency in pricing.

Unlike traditional installment purchases that lead to eventual ownership, Flex and other leasing models do not result in the consumer owning the console outright. Once the contract term ends, the hardware must be returned regardless of payments already made, or the consumer must enter a separate purchase negotiation. If payments stop early, the consumer loses access to the device without having worked toward ownership. This results in consumers paying substantial sums for temporary access to rapidly depreciating hardware, making the arrangement materially worse than a traditional purchase for long-term use.

These models shift financial risk to consumers while preserving platform control for Sony. Combined with digital-only consoles, DRM, subscription-gated functionality, and restrictions on repair or resale, leasing further weakens the consumer's right to own, repair, resell, or preserve purchased products. The net effect is a structural move away from ownership toward access-based consumption that prioritizes vendor control over consumer rights.

See also

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References

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