Rent vs Buy Calculator
Part of Home Buying Calculators
Compare the long-term financial impact of renting versus buying a home over time with appreciation, taxes, and opportunity costs.
How to Use the Rent vs Buy Calculator
This calculator helps you make an informed decision about whether renting or buying a home makes more financial sense based on your specific situation. Enter the home purchase price, down payment percentage, mortgage interest rate, and loan term for buying. Then enter your current monthly rent and expected annual rent increases. The calculator considers property appreciation, property taxes, insurance, HOA fees, maintenance costs, and mortgage payments to give you a comprehensive comparison over your chosen timeframe.
Understanding the Results
The calculator shows total costs for both renting and buying over your selected period. For buying, it includes all mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, HOA fees, and maintenance, minus the equity you build through principal payments and home appreciation. For renting, it shows total rent paid over the period, adjusted for annual increases. The net difference tells you which option costs less and by how much.
Key Factors in the Rent vs Buy Decision
- Down Payment: The upfront cash needed to buy affects your liquidity and opportunity cost of that capital.
- Monthly Payment Comparison: Mortgage payments (including taxes and insurance) versus rent determine your monthly cash flow.
- Home Appreciation: Property value growth builds equity and wealth over time when you own.
- Tax Benefits: Mortgage interest and property taxes may be tax-deductible, reducing the true cost of ownership.
- Maintenance Costs: Homeowners pay for repairs and upkeep that landlords typically cover for renters.
- Flexibility: Renting offers more flexibility to relocate, while buying builds long-term stability and equity.
- Market Conditions: Local real estate trends, interest rates, and rental market dynamics affect which option is better.
When Buying Makes More Sense
Buying is typically advantageous when you plan to stay in the home for at least 5-7 years, have a stable income, can afford a reasonable down payment, interest rates are favorable, and the local real estate market shows steady appreciation. Homeownership builds equity, provides stability, and offers potential tax benefits. If you value putting money toward ownership rather than rent, and the monthly costs are comparable, buying often wins long-term.
When Renting Makes More Sense
Renting may be better if you need flexibility to relocate for work or personal reasons, don't have enough saved for a down payment, are in an expensive housing market where buying seems overpriced, or you're uncertain about job stability. Renting eliminates maintenance costs, property taxes, and the risk of market downturns. If housing prices are high relative to rents in your area, or if you can invest the down payment money for higher returns elsewhere, renting can be the smarter financial choice.
Additional Considerations
This calculator provides a financial comparison but doesn't account for personal preferences and lifestyle factors. Consider your career stability, family plans, desire for customization and control over your living space, local school quality if you have children, and emotional value of homeownership. Also factor in closing costs when buying (typically 2-5% of home price), potential selling costs when you move (realtor fees around 5-6%), and the opportunity cost of your down payment capital. Some people value the freedom and simplicity of renting, while others prioritize the stability and investment potential of owning.
If buying makes sense, use the Home Affordability Calculator to set your budget. Calculate your down payment needs and estimate closing costs for the full picture.