Mortgage vs Renting: Which Makes More Financial Sense?
The rent vs. buy decision is one of the largest financial choices most people ever make โ and one of the most frequently misunderstood. Popular wisdom says buying is always better because "you're building equity." The reality is considerably more nuanced, and for many people in many markets, renting is the smarter financial choice. This guide gives you the full picture.
The Hidden Costs of Buying
The mortgage payment is just the starting point. Homeownership comes with a stack of additional costs that renters don't pay:
- Closing costs: 2โ5% of the purchase price, paid at closing. On a $350,000 home, that's $7,000โ$17,500 out of pocket before you move in.
- Property taxes: Typically 1โ2% of home value per year. On a $350,000 home, $3,500โ$7,000 annually โ $292โ$583 per month added to your cost.
- Homeowner's insurance: $100โ$200/month on average.
- PMI: If your down payment is under 20%, private mortgage insurance adds 0.5โ1.5% of the loan value annually โ roughly $100โ$250/month on a $300,000 loan.
- Maintenance and repairs: The standard rule is to budget 1โ2% of home value per year. On a $350,000 home, that's $3,500โ$7,000 annually for things like appliances, HVAC, roof repairs, plumbing, and landscaping.
- Selling costs: When you eventually sell, real estate agent commissions typically run 5โ6% of the sale price. On a $400,000 sale, that's $20,000โ$24,000 coming out before you see any profit.
The Hidden Costs of Renting
Renting has its own costs and disadvantages that are sometimes overlooked:
- Annual rent increases: Most markets see 3โ5% annual rent increases. A $2,000/month apartment becomes $2,600/month after just 5 years at 5% annual increases.
- No equity building: Rent payments build equity for your landlord, not you. Every dollar paid in rent is gone.
- Instability: Landlords can choose not to renew leases, sell the property, or increase rent substantially at renewal.
- No customization: Renters typically cannot renovate, repaint, or significantly modify their space.
The Break-Even Timeline
Due to closing costs and transaction costs, buying almost always looks worse than renting in the short term. The question is: how many years until buying becomes cheaper?
A rough rule of thumb: buying needs at least 5โ7 years to break even after accounting for transaction costs. In high-cost markets with slow appreciation (San Francisco, New York, Boston), the break-even can be 10โ15 years. In affordable markets with strong appreciation (some Midwestern cities, secondary markets), it can be 3โ4 years.
The break-even calculation depends on: purchase price, mortgage rate, down payment, local property taxes, expected appreciation rate, and how much rent you'd pay instead. Our Rent vs. Buy Calculator models all of these simultaneously.
The Price-to-Rent Ratio
The price-to-rent ratio is the single fastest way to assess whether buying or renting makes more financial sense in a specific market. It's calculated as:
A home that costs $400,000 and would rent for $2,000/month = $400,000 รท $24,000 = ratio of 16.7
- Ratio below 15: Buying typically makes strong financial sense
- Ratio 15โ20: Buying or renting can make sense depending on your circumstances
- Ratio above 20: Renting is usually the financially superior choice
- Ratio above 30: Buying makes almost no financial sense โ renting strongly favored
In 2024, many coastal US cities (San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, New York, Miami) have price-to-rent ratios of 25โ50. On pure financial math, renting is the right choice in these markets for most people.
The Opportunity Cost of the Down Payment
A 20% down payment on a $400,000 home is $80,000. That money invested in a diversified index fund historically returns around 10% annually. Over 10 years, $80,000 invested becomes approximately $207,000. That $127,000 gain represents the opportunity cost of tying up capital in a down payment โ a cost that's rarely factored into "buying vs. renting" comparisons but is very real.
When Buying Makes More Sense
Despite the financial complexity, buying often makes sense when:
- You plan to stay at least 7โ10 years (enough time to break even and benefit from appreciation)
- The price-to-rent ratio in your area is below 15โ18
- You value stability, customization, and putting down roots
- You have a solid emergency fund beyond the down payment
- Local market conditions favor appreciation
When Renting Makes More Sense
- You might move within 5 years (job changes, relationship changes, lifestyle exploration)
- The price-to-rent ratio exceeds 20 in your target area
- Your income or job situation isn't stable enough for a 30-year commitment
- The down payment would exhaust your savings, leaving no emergency fund
- Local market conditions suggest flat or declining appreciation
๐ Run your own rent vs. buy comparison with our free calculator โ includes opportunity cost modeling.
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