Determine if it is financially better to rent or buy a home based on your specific financial situation.
| Staying Length | Avg. Monthly Cost (Buy) | Annual Cost (Buy) | Avg. Monthly Cost (Rent) | Annual Cost (Rent) |
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The decision to rent or buy is one of the most significant financial choices you will make. While buying offers the psychological benefit of ownership and potential appreciation, renting provides flexibility and lower upfront costs. Our Rent vs. Buy Calculator analyzes the hard numbers: mortgage amortization, tax deductions, opportunity costs of investing your down payment, and closing costs to give you a clear "break-even" point.
Buying involves more than just a mortgage payment. "PITI" (Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance) is the core, but maintenance, HOA fees, and closing costs (often 2-5% when buying and 6-10% when selling) significantly impact the total cost. However, you build equity and benefit from tax deductions on mortgage interest and property taxes.
Renting typically has lower upfront costs (security deposit vs. down payment). However, rent payments do not build equity, and rent prices tend to increase over time. The main financial advantage of renting is the "Opportunity Cost"—you can invest the money you would have spent on a down payment and closing costs into the stock market.
Financially, buying usually makes sense if you stay in the home past the "break-even point." This is the year when the total cost of buying becomes cheaper than renting. Before this point, the high transaction costs of buying (down payment, closing costs) usually outweigh the benefits. This calculator helps you find that exact year.