Money

When Renting Is Smarter Than Buying

You’re not necessarily throwing your money away when you rent.

A sign on a sidewalk with arrows pointing towards owning or renting.

I moved to Washington, D.C., in 2010, and I was perfectly happy as a renter. Neither of my apartments were luxurious. But in an expensive city with limited housing, I paid below market rate for my first place (my roommate and I had our own bedrooms, thanks to a makeshift wall). Later, when I wanted to live alone, I landed an underpriced studio in a rent-controlled building. But as more friends purchased shiny condos or casually speculated about future plans to buy, I wondered whether buying is something I should consider.

The nagging feeling that buying is something you should do is one big reason that millennials choose to buy, said Bill Nelson, a certified financial planner and founder of Pacesetter Planning near Boston. We’ve also been told that buying is an investment, and renting is “just throwing money away.”

Adding up the costs. Many experts recommend buying only if you expect to park yourself there for at least five to seven years. What if you like your city and current situation but also have no idea where life will take you in the next five to seven years? Sometimes, “the most you can say is ‘I plan to stay in the same spot, knowing everything about my circumstances, career and family today,'” said Jeff Tucker, an economist at home-price site Zillow.com.

The costs are ever-changing (and usually rising), which can put buying a home out of reach for many potential homeowners. A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage loan has a 6.6% interest rate as of May 2023, and according to Kiplinger’s Economic Outlook, there’s no downward trend coming in the near future. Not only is the interest rate rising, but so are home costs. The median price of a home in the first quarter of 2023 was $436,800, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. That’s more than $100,000 higher than the median price of home ($329,000) prior to COVID in January 2020.

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