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    2021 Nissan Leaf Buying Guide: Trims, Range, Battery Health & Pricing
    Used EVs·11 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    2021 Nissan Leaf Buying Guide: Trims, Range, Battery Health & Pricing

    nissan-leaf2021-model-yearused-ev-buyingbattery-healthev-rangechademocompact-evrecharged-scorebudget-ev

    Table of Contents

    • Why the 2021 Nissan Leaf is a smart used EV
    • 2021 Leaf trims, batteries, and key specs
    • Range: what to expect from a 2021 Leaf today
    • Charging the 2021 Leaf: home, public, and fast charging
    • Battery health, degradation, and warranty
    • Safety ratings and driver-assistance tech
    • Used pricing and running costs
    • 2021 Leaf buying checklist
    • Common issues and what to watch for
    • How Recharged evaluates 2021 Leaf battery health
    • FAQ: 2021 Nissan Leaf buying questions
    • Is a 2021 Nissan Leaf right for you?

    If you're shopping for an affordable used EV, the 2021 Nissan Leaf should be high on your list. This guide walks you through trims, range, battery health, charging, pricing, and inspection tips so you can decide whether a 2021 Leaf fits your commute, budget, and long‑term plans.

    Quick take

    The 2021 Leaf is one of the most budget‑friendly used EVs on the market, with simple tech, solid safety ratings, and enough range for most daily commutes, if you pick the right battery and understand its limitations.

    Why the 2021 Nissan Leaf is a smart used EV

    The second‑generation Leaf (2018–2024) is a known quantity at this point. By 2021, Nissan had settled into a stable formula: two battery sizes, proven powertrains, and standard driver‑assist tech. That makes the 2021 model year a sweet spot: newer safety and infotainment, but old enough to have taken a big depreciation hit already.

    Who the 2021 Leaf fits best

    Match the car to your real daily use, not your edge cases.

    Urban & suburban commuters

    Ideal if you drive 30–60 miles per day and can charge at home or work. Even the 40 kWh Leaf covers this comfortably with some range to spare.

    Budget-focused buyers

    Used 2021 Leafs typically cost less than many hybrids, yet you avoid gas, oil changes, and most traditional maintenance. Operating costs are among the lowest in the segment.

    “Second car” households

    Perfect as a dedicated commuter or school‑run car while another vehicle handles road trips and towing. This setup sidesteps the Leaf’s fast‑charging and highway limitations.

    Where the Leaf may disappoint

    If you need frequent 200+ mile highway trips, CHAdeMO fast‑charging and modest highway efficiency make the 2021 Leaf a compromise. In that case, you may want to look at longer‑range EVs with CCS or NACS fast‑charging instead.

    2021 Leaf trims, batteries, and key specs

    For 2021, Nissan sold the Leaf in two basic flavors: the standard Leaf with a 40 kWh battery and the Leaf Plus with a 62 kWh pack. Power, range, and charging times all depend on which one you get.

    2021 Nissan Leaf trims, batteries and EPA range

    Use this chart to quickly compare the main 2021 Leaf configurations.

    TrimBatteryPowerEPA range (new)Typical use case
    S40 kWh147 hp149 milesShort commutes, city driving
    SV40 kWh147 hp149 milesMore features, same range as S
    S Plus62 kWh214 hp226 milesBest combo of price and range
    SV Plus62 kWh214 hp215 milesExtra comfort and tech
    SL Plus62 kWh214 hp215 milesTop trim, longest feature list

    EPA range figures are when new; expect some reduction on a 4–5‑year‑old battery.

    Best value trim

    For most buyers, the S Plus is the sweet spot: you get the larger 62 kWh battery with the longest EPA range, more power, and simpler equipment than the pricey SL Plus.
    Close-up of a 2021 Nissan Leaf charging port and connector while plugged into a home Level 2 charger
    When you evaluate a 2021 Leaf, confirm which battery size it has, range and resale value depend heavily on it.

    Range: what to expect from a 2021 Leaf today

    Official EPA range ratings are a helpful baseline, but a used 2021 Leaf will not behave like a brand‑new car. Age, miles, climate, and driving style all chip away at range, and the Leaf’s passive‑cooled battery is more sensitive to heat than some liquid‑cooled rivals.

    Real‑world range expectations (2026)

    ~115–130 mi
    Typical 40 kWh range
    City/suburban mix, moderate climate, normal degradation
    ~180–200 mi
    Typical 62 kWh range
    Leaf Plus at 70–85 mph mix, mild temperatures
    -15–25%
    Cold weather hit
    Common winter range loss vs. EPA figures on highway drives
    4–5 yrs
    Age of 2021 Leaf
    Plan around some battery health loss compared with new
    • Expect the 40 kWh Leaf to feel comfortable for daily 60–70 mile commutes with home charging, but tight for 100+ mile winter days.
    • The 62 kWh Leaf Plus is much easier to live with, especially if you do frequent 80–150 mile days or can’t charge every night.
    • High sustained speeds (70–80 mph), cold weather, and frequent fast‑charging will noticeably reduce usable range.

    Highway and winter driving reality

    Many owners are surprised how quickly range drops at 75 mph on a cold day. If your driving is mostly fast highway in a northern climate, mentally budget for 30–40% less range than the original EPA number, especially on a 40 kWh Leaf.

    Charging the 2021 Leaf: home, public, and fast charging

    All 2021 Leafs support Level 1 and Level 2 AC charging and use the older CHAdeMO standard for DC fast charging. That combination works well for home and local public charging, but it’s less future‑proof than CCS or NACS on newer EVs.

    Charging options for a 2021 Leaf

    How you plan to charge should heavily influence whether the Leaf makes sense for you.

    Home Level 2 (recommended)

    With a 240V Level 2 charger, the Leaf’s 6.6 kW onboard charger can refill a 40 kWh pack in roughly 7–8 hours and a 62 kWh pack in about 11–12 hours. This turns most homes into "full every morning" fueling stations.

    Public Level 2

    AC stations at workplaces, gyms, and parking garages are plentiful in many metro areas. A couple of hours at 6–7 kW can easily add 30–50 miles of range while you go about your day.

    DC fast charging (CHAdeMO)

    Fast charging is possible but the Leaf uses CHAdeMO, a standard that’s fading in North America. Connector availability is shrinking on many new sites, so long‑term road‑trip support is uncertain.

    The CHAdeMO caveat

    If road trips and DC fast charging are central to your use case, the 2021 Leaf is swimming against the current. Most new US fast‑charging sites focus on CCS and NACS. Treat CHAdeMO as a backup, not your primary fueling plan.

    Battery health, degradation, and warranty

    Battery health is the single most important variable when buying any used Leaf. Unlike some competitors, the Leaf’s pack is air‑cooled, which makes it more sensitive to heat and high‑stress charging patterns. But with the right history, a 2021 pack can still be in solid shape.

    What "state of health" means

    Battery state of health (SoH) is a percentage estimate of remaining capacity vs. when the car was new. A 62 kWh Leaf at 85% SoH effectively behaves like a ~53 kWh pack.

    Nissan’s in‑car battery bar display is crude. Many owners and dealers use tools like Leaf Spy to get a more precise SoH reading, but interpreting that data correctly matters.

    Typical degradation pattern

    Real‑world owner data suggests a front‑loaded degradation curve: a few percent in the first year or two, then a slower taper. Climate, fast‑charging, and storage at high state‑of‑charge can accelerate losses.

    Instead of fixating on a single SoH number, look at how the car is actually behaving: usable range, rapid drops at low state‑of‑charge, and whether the car has lost any capacity bars.

    2021 Nissan Leaf battery warranty overview

    High‑voltage battery coverage is a key part of the buying decision.

    CoverageTermWhat it covers
    Basic EV system warranty5 years / 60,000 milesElectric powertrain components beyond the battery pack
    Lithium‑ion battery capacity warranty8 years / 100,000 milesIf capacity drops below 9 bars (about 70% SoH) on the gauge within the term
    Battery defect warranty8 years / 100,000 milesManufacturing defects causing failures beyond normal degradation

    Warranty terms can vary by region and prior usage; always confirm with a dealer using the VIN.

    Look for remaining battery warranty

    In 2026, many 2021 Leafs still fall within the 8‑year / 100,000‑mile battery warranty window. A car with lower miles and a clean history that still has capacity coverage is worth a premium.

    Safety ratings and driver-assistance tech

    On safety, the 2021 Leaf punches above its price bracket. Later second‑gen Leafs benefit from structural and restraint updates plus a full suite of active‑safety features, making them a reassuring choice for new EV drivers and families.

    • Available crash‑test results from major US and global programs are generally strong for the 2020–2024 Leaf generation.
    • Nissan Safety Shield 360, automatic emergency braking, blind‑spot monitoring, lane‑departure warning, rear cross‑traffic alert, and more, came standard on all 2021 trims.
    • ProPILOT Assist, Nissan’s lane‑centering and adaptive‑cruise system, is available on SV/SV Plus (via packages) and standard on the SL Plus. It makes highway commuting noticeably less tiring.

    Good news for first‑time EV buyers

    If you’re moving into your first EV, the 2021 Leaf’s safety tech and relatively conventional driving feel make the transition easy, there’s no learning curve like you’ll find on some more futuristic competitors.

    Used pricing and running costs

    Because new Leafs were aggressively discounted and the market has shifted toward newer EVs with CCS/NACS, the 2021 Leaf has taken heavy depreciation. That’s frustrating for first owners but great for used buyers.

    2021 Leaf cost snapshot (early 2026)

    ~$11.5k–$14.5k
    Typical retail ask
    Healthy‑battery 2021 Leafs in many US markets
    ≈50–60%
    Depreciation
    Common drop vs. original out‑the‑door price by year 4–5
    $400–$700/yr
    Electricity cost
    Typical annual charging spend for ~10–12k miles at home rates
    Low
    Maintenance needs
    No oil, no timing belt, few wear items vs. gas car

    Why prices vary so much

    You’ll see wild spreads in online listings. Battery health, remaining warranty, fast‑charging history, accident records, and local incentives all move the needle. Two 2021 Leafs with the same miles can be worth very different amounts.

    2021 Leaf buying checklist

    Step‑by‑step 2021 Leaf inspection checklist

    1. Confirm battery size and trim

    Check the window sticker, build sheet, or VIN decoder to verify whether you’re looking at a 40 kWh Leaf (S/SV) or a 62 kWh Leaf Plus (S Plus/SV Plus/SL Plus). Don’t rely solely on seller claims or badging.

    2. Review battery health

    Use a trusted scan (like a Recharged Score battery report) to see state of health, DC fast‑charge counts, and any trouble codes. Be wary of cars with unusually low SoH for their age or signs of frequent rapid‑charging abuse.

    3. Evaluate your real range needs

    List your typical weekday and weekend miles, climate, and highway speeds. If your regular days are pushing beyond 70–80 miles, even in winter, strongly favor the 62 kWh Leaf Plus.

    4. Inspect charging hardware

    Verify the included Level 1 or Level 2 portable charger works, and inspect the CHAdeMO port and dust cap for damage or corrosion. Test charge at both Level 2 and (if possible) a CHAdeMO station before buying.

    5. Check safety and driver‑assist features

    Confirm that Safety Shield 360 functions correctly. If the car advertises ProPILOT Assist, test it on a highway stretch to ensure lane‑centering and adaptive cruise work smoothly and without warnings.

    6. Run a full history and recall check

    Pull a vehicle history report, look for prior accidents or flood damage, and verify open recalls have been addressed. Because the battery is so central, avoid cars with unclear service histories.

    7. Evaluate tires and brakes

    EVs are heavier than similar gas cars and can be harder on tires. Inspect tread depth and look for uneven wear that could indicate suspension or alignment issues from curb hits or potholes.

    8. Test drive under your real conditions

    Don’t just loop the block. Drive at highway speeds, climb any local hills, and watch how the range estimate behaves. Abrupt drops in the state of charge at low battery levels can hint at cell imbalances.

    Common issues and what to watch for

    Overall, the 2021 Leaf’s electric powertrain has proven robust, but like any EV there are patterns in owner reports. Knowing them upfront helps you separate normal quirks from red flags.

    Common 2021 Leaf issues (and how to interpret them)

    Not every quirk is a deal‑breaker, but some deserve extra scrutiny.

    Faster‑than‑expected degradation

    Some owners in hot climates or with heavy fast‑charging use report steeper capacity loss than they expected. A single low SoH number doesn’t tell the whole story; pair data with real‑world range and warranty status.

    Cold‑weather range swings

    Large drops in range and sharp state‑of‑charge swings at low temperatures are widely reported. Mild variation is normal; severe or unpredictable drops can indicate a weak cell or battery management issue.

    Charging‑related glitches

    Occasional errors when plugging into certain public stations are more about the station than the car. However, repeated failures with multiple stations, or overheating warnings, justify a deeper battery and charge‑port inspection.

    When to walk away

    If a 2021 Leaf shows signs of rapid capacity loss, won’t fast‑charge correctly, or has inconsistent state‑of‑charge readings that the seller can’t explain, assume you’re inheriting someone else’s headache. There are plenty of good examples out there, don’t force a bad one.

    How Recharged evaluates 2021 Leaf battery health

    Because a Leaf’s value lives or dies with its battery, Recharged bakes deep pack analysis into every 2021 Leaf we list. The goal is to translate raw data into a simple story about what you can realistically expect from the car over the next several years.

    Recharged Score battery diagnostics

    Every Leaf on Recharged gets a Recharged Score Report that includes verified battery health, pack temperature behavior, and charging history indicators. Instead of a vague "12 bars" or a single SoH screenshot, you see how the battery performs under load and across the charge curve.

    This helps you compare two similar‑looking 2021 Leafs and immediately spot which one has the stronger pack and better long‑term prospects.

    End‑to‑end used EV support

    Beyond diagnostics, Recharged offers financing, trade‑in options, instant offers or consignment, and nationwide delivery, plus EV‑specialist support if you’re new to electric ownership. You can do the entire transaction digitally or visit our Experience Center in Richmond, VA to see cars in person.

    If you already have a specific Leaf in mind (even at another seller), you can use our content library, like this guide, to reality‑check its battery health claims and pricing.

    FAQ: 2021 Nissan Leaf buying questions

    Frequently asked questions about buying a 2021 Nissan Leaf

    Is a 2021 Nissan Leaf right for you?

    A well‑chosen 2021 Nissan Leaf can deliver incredibly cheap, low‑drama electric miles for years to come. The key is matching its strengths, simple hardware, low running costs, and comfortable daily range, to a lifestyle that doesn’t depend on constant DC fast charging or 300‑mile highway days. If that sounds like your reality, focusing on a Leaf Plus with a verified strong battery and remaining warranty is the smartest play. And if you want expert help decoding battery data and pricing, Recharged is built to guide you through every step of the used EV buying journey.

    EVs on Recharged

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