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Renting Vs. Buying: Financial Facts

Fact: You are going to pay for a place to live. Period. There is no free lunch and paying for a roof over your head is going to be part of your budget for a very long time. Given your needs (either just you, a partner or a larger family), there is a certain amount of space you need. For a family of , that means bedrooms for at least years and likely closer to . You are either going to spend that paying to live in someone else's home or your own. Fact: Rent and mortgages are closer in monthly payments than you think. Average BR rents in my metro area (Minneapolis) are $-/month with many closer to $. That's for a rented condominium, not a house. In my metro area, there are currently over condos and townhomes (equals owning the same thing you rent) under $ a month in payments. There are another single family homes (an upgrade from apartments) under that same threshold. Fact: The value of your home comes not from paying it off, but from compounded appreciation. Example: $, financed for years at % and % average appreciation (a historically reasonable number). Over the course of the years, you will make payments totalling $,. At the end of that years, your home and the land it sits on will be worth $,,. Of that value, only about a third is what you actually paid in mortgage payments. The rest ($,) came from the appreciation. Combine that with the fact that the nearly $, in interest paid over the years is tax deductible, knocking nearly a third off in terms of take home money (the money left over after taxes in your paycheck and the money you use to pay rent) and the "free" money ends up closer to $, and even more if you used the tax savings wisely. Fact: Owning a home comes with built in rent control. As the years go by, your rent will go up and a mortgage will not. Assuming you rent my house (see note at the end) for what the mortgage costs right now ($ a month) and the rent goes up only on pace with inflation (% or so this year), which, in most urban markets is very conservative, in years, the rent will be $ a month instead of the last $/month payment I'll be making. After that, with the homeowner no longer making ANY payments, the rent will continue to go up. Over the year span, the value of just pegging your monthly housing costs at a single number is over a quarter of a million dollars. Fact: Paying for a place to live is paying someone's mortgage. In the vast majority of cases, when you pay rent, your landlord does not own that property outright. What that means is that your landlord takes your rent and makes the mortgage payment on your home, putting the rest in his pocket. As the years on that mortgage go by, the rent will increase and his mortgage will not, meaning your apartment becomes more and more profitible. Fact: Affordability over the last + years in real estate has come not from income gain, but from sprawl. Historically, home prices have increased at % annually while inflation at large has increased at closer to % with salaries lagging behind even that. This odd gap is fueled by urban sprawl. New houses are built on cheap land outside the city. Those cheaper houses often go to st time home buyers, while the % is people moving up by cashing in on their % growth. As a result, the longer you wait to buy a house, the more this gap will affect you and you will be living further away from jobs to live in a house you like. Fact: By the third year of renting my house, the difference between the payments alone is nearly $. By year , you've got an entire IRA contribution ($) extra every year to save for retirement. This means that even if the payments are slightly higher than rent, it only takes a couple of years for them to no longer be. Note: All examples use rent in my area and my house as the basis for numbers. My house is a BR/BA in a northern border suburb of Minneapolis, minutes north of downtown. It sits on a third of an acre lot and has a car attached garage.

Shubham Ganeshwadi

Shubham Ganeshwadi

Hi, I’m Shubham Ganeshwadi, Your Blogging Journey Guide 🖋️. Writing, one blog post at a time, to inspire, inform, and ignite your curiosity. Join me as we explore the world through words and embark on a limitless adventure of knowledge and creativity. Let’s bring your thoughts to life on these digital pages. 🌟 #BloggingAdventures

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