Robert A. Di Ieso, Jr.
Q: My wife and I are enjoying city life
and the flexibility of being renters. But everyone says we’re crazy for not
buying a home. Is renting really such a bad financial move?
A: You’re certainly not crazy for
enjoying the food, culture, and lifestyle that come with living in a great
American city. But your real question seems to be whether it’s better to buy a
home — even a downtown condo or co-op apartment, rather than a single-family
property — or keep renting.
By waiting, of course, you’re missing
out on the mortgage tax deduction. Often called the last middle-class tax
break, this allows homeowners to write off the mortgage interest they pay on
their primary home. If you were to buy a home at the national median price (now about
$229,000) with the standard 20% down payment and a 4% fixed mortgage rate, you
could get a roughly $7,269 write-off in Year 1 — and end up paying $1,817 less
that year in taxes, assuming a 25% effective tax rate. For the median price
home in San Francisco — a whopping $1 million — your first-year savings could
be more like $7,935, given the same set of assumptions.
So for the simplest comparison, you
would subtract that tax savings from your annual mortgage payments and weigh
that against the cost of your rental.
But there are other factors to consider. Home maintenance
costs are one issue; they might move the needle closer to the rental side. Assuming that you do plan to
buy eventually, however, a stronger argument to make a move now has to do with
mortgage interest rates, which are near historic lows — just over 4% as of this
writing — and home prices, which while up from the depths of the Great
Recession, are expected to rise in the next few years.
Waiting just a year to buy would mean
an estimated loss of $18,672 in missed monetary gain and other financial
benefits, according to an analysis published in May by Realtor.com chief
economist Jonathan Smoke. Waiting three years would cost $54,879, according to
Smoke’s Opportunity Cost Report.
Now, it’s no surprise that an economist
associated with the National Association of Realtors would suggest buying into
the housing market, but a look at the math that went into his equation does
make a strong case:
·
In 80% of counties, buying is simply
cheaper than renting (based on a comparison of median rent vs. the typical
monthly payment for a median price home, subtracting the mortgage interest
deduction but adding 1% of the purchase price each year for repairs and maintenance),
according to Smoke.
·
Notwithstanding the past decade’s
crash, real estate values have historically appreciated at 1% above the
inflation rate over the long term. That’s after accounting for closing costs,
which Smoke pegs at 8%, including commissions and other costs.
·
Rental costs are expected to
increase 1.9% in the next year and then 2.2% a year for the next decade, Smoke
says, citing an analysis of Housing and Urban Development fair market rent
statistics and historical trends.
·
Realtor.com predicts that housing
prices will increase 5.4% this year, based on current supply and demand, and
then an average of 3% moving forward, saying that housing historically
increases one percentage point above the inflation rate (and assuming the Fed
successfully targets 2% inflation).
·
Realtor.com also predicts that
interest rates will climb from the current 4.05% to 4.4% in one year, and add
another 1% each of the following two years.
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