Rent vs Buy Calculator

Compare the true cost of renting vs buying a home over your time horizon. Includes mortgage, taxes, maintenance, equity buildup, and rent increases.

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Buying Cost vs Renting (over period)
Total Rent Paid
Total Net Buying Cost
Home Equity Built
Better Financial Choice

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your current or expected Monthly Rent.
  2. Enter the Home Purchase Price and Down Payment.
  3. Enter the Mortgage Interest Rate and how many Years you plan to stay.
  4. Expand More Options to adjust home appreciation and rent increase assumptions.
  5. See the total cost comparison and which option is financially better for your timeline.

Formula

Total Renting Cost = Sum of rent payments over period

Total Buying Cost = Down Payment + Closing Costs + Mortgage Payments + Taxes + Insurance + Maintenance − Equity Built

Home Equity = Future Home Value − Remaining Loan Balance

Example

Example: $2,000/month rent vs $400,000 home, $80,000 down, 6.8% rate, 7 years.

  • Total Rent Paid (7 yrs): ~$161,400
  • Monthly Mortgage: $2,091 P&I
  • Home Equity Built: ~$136,000
  • Net Buying Cost: ~$147,000
  • Advantage: Buying saves ~$14,400 over 7 years

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Not always. Buying typically wins if you stay 5+ years, home values appreciate, and you can afford 20% down. Renting wins if you move frequently, home prices are very high relative to rents, or you invest the down payment difference.
  • Price-to-rent ratio = Home Price ÷ Annual Rent. Under 15 = buying typically favors, 15–20 = neutral, above 20 = renting often makes more sense. San Francisco (40+) and New York City (30+) often favor renting; Midwest cities (12–16) often favor buying.
  • Beyond the mortgage: property taxes (~1.1% of value/year), homeowners insurance (~0.3%), maintenance (~1% of value/year), HOA fees, closing costs (2–5%), PMI if under 20% down. Total "true cost" of ownership can be 1.5–2× the mortgage payment.
  • Typically 4–7 years, due to closing costs (2–5%) and slow equity buildup in early years when most payments go to interest. The "break-even" period depends on local price-to-rent ratios and expected appreciation.
  • Historically yes, through equity buildup and appreciation. US homes appreciated ~3.5–4% annually over the long run, beating inflation. However, stocks have historically outperformed real estate on a total return basis — the down payment invested in index funds might grow more.

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