One of the most important financial decisions you'll make. Compare the true long-term cost of renting versus buying, factoring in equity, appreciation, taxes, and investment opportunity cost.
Compare renting vs. buying Long-term analysis
Buying details
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US avg: ~3–4% annually
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Rule of thumb: 1% of home value
Renting details
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If you invest the down payment instead
Total cost to buy
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Better choice
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Total cost to rent
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Home equity built
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Home value at end
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Frequently asked questions
Is it always better to buy than rent? ›
Not necessarily. Buying is generally better if you plan to stay in an area for 5+ years, have a stable income, can afford a meaningful down payment, and the local housing market is not overvalued. Renting can be smarter if you may need to move soon, in expensive cities where price-to-rent ratios are very high, or if you can earn better returns investing the down payment.
What is the price-to-rent ratio? ›
The price-to-rent ratio compares home prices to annual rent. Divide the home price by the annual rent. A ratio below 15 generally favors buying; 15–20 is neutral; above 20 often favors renting. Major metro areas like San Francisco and New York typically have ratios of 30+, making renting often more financially sensible there.
What hidden costs do buyers often overlook? ›
Closing costs (2–5% of purchase price), property taxes (0.5–2.5% annually depending on state), homeowner's insurance, HOA fees, maintenance and repairs (budget 1–2% of home value per year), and private mortgage insurance (PMI) if putting less than 20% down. These can add $500–$1,500+/month beyond the mortgage payment itself.
Does owning a home build more wealth than renting? ›
Historically, homeownership has been a primary wealth-building tool for Americans, largely through forced savings (equity) and appreciation. However, a disciplined renter who invests the down payment and the monthly savings in index funds can sometimes accumulate more wealth — especially in high-cost markets. The answer depends heavily on local real estate appreciation, investment returns, and how long you stay.
About this rent vs. buy calculator
Our rent vs. buy calculator provides a comprehensive comparison over your chosen time horizon. It accounts for mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and equity building on the buying side — versus rent payments and investment returns on the down payment for the renting side — to give you an apples-to-apples comparison.
The 5-year rule
A common guideline is that buying only makes financial sense if you plan to stay for at least 5 years, because transaction costs (closing costs when buying, real estate commissions when selling) can total 8–10% of the home value. This means you need significant appreciation and equity building just to break even on the transaction costs alone.