True cost comparison over 5 and 10 years. Accounts for opportunity cost, home appreciation, maintenance, selling costs, and rent increases.
The rent-versus-buy decision is one of the most financially consequential choices most households make, yet it is routinely oversimplified into the advice that "buying is always better than renting in the long run." This claim ignores critical variables: how long you plan to stay, local price-to-rent ratios, opportunity costs of the down payment, transaction costs, maintenance expenses, and tax situations. The Rent vs Buy Calculator on Digital.Finance models both scenarios with full financial detail and shows you the breakeven point — how many years you need to stay in a home for buying to be more financially advantageous than renting and investing the difference. The answer varies dramatically by city, price level, and individual financial situation.
The calculator builds parallel financial models for renting and buying over your specified time horizon. The buying model includes the down payment, closing costs, monthly mortgage payment, property taxes, homeowner's insurance, PMI if applicable, maintenance and repair costs (typically estimated at 1% to 2% of home value annually), HOA fees if any, and the tax benefit of mortgage interest deduction. It also models home value appreciation and the equity accumulated over time. The renting model includes monthly rent, renters insurance, and models the investment growth of the money that would otherwise be tied up in a down payment and closing costs. At the end of the specified period, the calculator shows the net wealth position under each scenario, accounting for what the home could be sold for (minus transaction costs) if purchased.
The true monthly cost of homeownership includes far more than the mortgage payment. Property taxes on a $350,000 home average roughly 1.1% annually in the United States — approximately $3,850 per year, or $321 per month. Homeowner's insurance typically costs $100 to $200 per month. Maintenance and repairs — the plumbing issues, HVAC servicing, roof eventual replacement, appliance failures, and landscaping — realistically cost 1% to 2% of home value annually. On a $350,000 home, that is $3,500 to $7,000 per year in expected maintenance costs. Adding these to a 30-year mortgage payment turns a $1,500 mortgage into an all-in monthly cost of $2,200 to $2,500. Many buyers underestimate or entirely overlook these costs when deciding to buy, leading to budget stress after the purchase.
The price-to-rent ratio — dividing a home's market value by its annual rent equivalent — is a useful market-level indicator of whether buying or renting offers better value in a specific area. A ratio below 15 generally suggests buying is financially favorable. A ratio between 15 and 20 is a gray zone where individual circumstances matter greatly. A ratio above 20 suggests renting may be more financially sensible, especially for shorter holding periods. In some high-cost markets like San Francisco, New York, and certain parts of Los Angeles, price-to-rent ratios have exceeded 30 to 40 in recent years, making the pure financial case for buying very weak for typical holding periods. In many Midwestern cities with ratios below 12, buying can be clearly advantageous even over moderate timeframes.
Real estate transactions are expensive. Buying a home typically involves 2% to 5% of the purchase price in closing costs. Selling a home involves 5% to 6% in real estate agent commissions plus additional closing costs. Combined, buying and selling a $350,000 home can easily cost $28,000 to $35,000 in transaction costs. This upfront and exit cost creates a significant financial hurdle that home appreciation must overcome before the buyer is ahead of a renter investing the equivalent amount. In most scenarios, buyers need to hold a property for five to seven years to recover transaction costs and break even relative to renting. Buying a home you plan to own for two or three years is rarely financially advantageous even in appreciating markets.
The rent-versus-buy decision is not purely financial. Owning a home provides stability and predictability — you cannot be evicted and can modify the property as you choose. It can provide a sense of community belonging and may accommodate specific lifestyle needs like space for children or pets. Renting offers flexibility to relocate for career opportunities without the friction of a home sale, which can be particularly valuable during early career years. For households with uncertain income, variable family circumstances, or high likelihood of geographic relocation, the flexibility premium of renting may outweigh the financial case for buying even in markets where the numbers favor ownership. The best decision integrates both the financial analysis and your personal life trajectory.
Long holding periods strongly favor buying in most markets, but not universally. In very high price-to-rent ratio markets, renting and aggressively investing the difference can outperform buying even over 10- to 15-year periods, particularly if alternative investments generate strong returns. The breakeven point is also affected by the interest rate environment: when mortgage rates are high relative to historical norms, the cost of financing a home purchase increases substantially, making renting comparatively more attractive. Running the numbers with your specific local costs, rates, and expected investment returns will give a more accurate answer than any rule of thumb.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 significantly reduced the value of the mortgage interest deduction for most homeowners by doubling the standard deduction to $29,200 for married filers in 2024. Only taxpayers who itemize deductions — generally those with mortgage interest, state and local taxes, and charitable contributions exceeding the standard deduction — receive any benefit from the mortgage interest deduction. Many homeowners, especially those with smaller loans or who are later in their mortgage when interest charges are lower, receive no tax benefit from homeownership at all. The calculator correctly models this by determining whether itemizing creates a benefit above the standard deduction for your specific loan and situation.
Beyond the down payment (ideally 20% to avoid PMI) and closing costs (2% to 5% of purchase price), financial planners commonly recommend having three to six months of total housing costs in reserve for emergencies after the purchase closes. On a $350,000 home with a 20% down payment, you would need approximately $70,000 for the down payment, $7,000 to $17,500 for closing costs, and $7,000 to $14,000 in cash reserves — a total of $84,000 to $100,000 in liquid savings before purchasing. Stretching to buy with the minimum down payment and no reserves leaves you financially vulnerable to the inevitable maintenance costs and expenses that arise in the first year of homeownership.