Second thoughts on the Dream of home ownership: Renting can be a better financial choice

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Second thoughts on the American Dream of home ownership: Study reveals that renting can be a better financial choice


Second thoughts on the American Dream of home ownership: Study reveals that renting can be a better financial choice
Posted by Contributing Writer × 03/22/2011 at 2:11 pm
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Home ownership lies at the core of the “American Dream,” revered by generations for its economic and social benefits. Yet a new study by faculty members at Florida International University and East Carolina University questions the assumption that buying a home is always the best investment – and raises the possibility that renting could have a stronger financial payoff.

The study, “Lessons from Over 30 Years of Buy versus Rent Decisions: Is the American Dream Always Wise?”by Eli Beracha of East Carolina University and Ken H. Johnson of Florida International University, to be published in a forthcoming issue of Real Estate Economics, reveals that over the majority of a 30-year study period, most individuals would have been financially better off renting than buying.

The study, which took place over the period 1978 through 2009, assumed an eight-year holding period and factored in adjustments for property appreciation, property maintenance, tax savings from mortgage interest deductions and other standard adjustments in the buy versus rent decision. Data on rental and purchase of similar homes in the same area were used in the analysis.

“Our study disputes the commonly-accepted wisdom in the United States that renting is always ‘throwing away money,’” said Johnson, Knight-Ridder Research Fellow at FIU and editor of the Journal of Real Estate Practice and Education. “As a government and a society, we recognize that home ownership has multi-dimensional benefits: increasing civic pride, improving self-esteem, crime prevention, child development, and better educational outcomes, among others. Yet our findings show that financially, if renters exercise disciplined investing over time, they can be more successful in accumulating wealth than those who own a home.”

At the same time, Beracha said, “the study reinforced previous research that found home ownership to be a better option for individuals who might otherwise spend the difference between the costs of renting and owning.”

“People who own typically wind up with more value, because a home appears to be a forced savings account,” Beracha said. For financial value to emerge in a rental situation, “the key question is whether individuals have the discipline to invest the cash savings they’d have from renting their home rather than buying it – a pattern that’s not typical of American renters.”

“There is research to indicate that the person who rents probably won’t have the financial discipline to save,” Johnson said. “He’ll spend it on education, or health care, or beer and cookies. If you didn’t have the financial discipline to invest the difference, you probably should have been buying.” Additional research removing the renter reinvestment requirement is underway by Johnson and Beracha to settle this concept of an owned residence being a forced saving account.

The study uses data collected in 23 different MSAs, and uses an eight-year holding period for comparative purposes. Factoring in costs associated with homeownership, tax benefits and home price appreciation and considering returns on similar risk portfolio, Beracha and Johnson were able to compare the homeowner proceeds from the sale of their home relative to the value of an investment portfolio held by a renter.

“This is the first ‘horse race’ that anyone’s ever done comparing home ownership versus renting, with the maximizing of wealth as the ‘finish line’,” Beracha said. While renting and investing did not provide better value in every period analyzed, he said, “it came out ahead a majority of the time.”

One notable exception to the rule was the period between the early 2000s, at the start of the housing boom, and 2006, when homes began their dramatic decline in value. Another exception is today. Current home market prices make today’s market the most compelling for home ownership in the buy versus rent equation. With the onset of depressed home prices, there are current indicators in place that strongly favor buying over renting. These indicators include higher than average rent-to-price ratios, near record low mortgage rates and favorable reinvestment opportunities.

The study’s findings could have potential implications for government programs that encourage home ownership for a wide segment of the population, using the accumulation of wealth as motivation.

“We’re one of the more mobile societies of the western developed economies, yet we have one of the highest rates of home ownership,” said Johnson. “In general, mobility decreases the ownership period making renting relatively more favorable.”
 

AtomicUse

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There are so many damn variables in the rent vs buy argument that it can't really be compared fairly, there's a lot of little nuances over such a long period. My condominium was a little over 300k when I purchased it and the HOA fee is almost a rent payment by itself, but I know I'll be selling this place when I'm in my 40's and take the money to buy something else. If you don't have a plan for buying I'd suggest renting the cheapest place you can stomach living in and maxing out your retirement accounts every year. :francis:
 
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There are so many damn variables in the rent vs buy argument that it can't really be compared fairly, there's a lot of little nuances over such a long period. My condominium was a little over 300k when I purchased it and the HOA fee is almost a rent payment by itself, but I know I'll be selling this place when I'm in my 40's and take the money to buy something else. If you don't have a plan for buying I'd suggest renting the cheapest place you can stomach living in and maxing out your retirement accounts every year. :francis:


The only thing that matters is if you made more money selling the house after subtracting the cost to buy it plus the expenses that come from ownership versus renting and investing the difference that you would have paid.
 

SeveroDrgnfli

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Owning a home isn't a big deal. Most people I know rent and they're making six figures. People sweat debt and ownership too much. It's not a status symbol anymore. Unless you own a business I don't care what you own TBH. if you don't have a skill set you can monetize anywhere in the world I'm really not interested in your advice because we're living two different lives.

Not everyone wants to be a professional and home owner.
 

Rayzah

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Owning a home isn't a big deal. Most people I know rent and they're making six figures. People sweat debt and ownership too much. It's not a status symbol anymore. Unless you own a business I don't care what you own TBH. if you don't have a skill set you can monetize anywhere in the world I'm really not interested in your advice because we're living two different lives.

Not everyone wants to be a professional and home owner.
I've been saying this for years. I would only buy property that I can pay cash for and plan on renting out. I'm not saving all of my money just to buy a house I have to spend 30 years to pay off
 

CodeBlaMeVi

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The key part of their argument

Yet our findings show that financially, if renters exercise disciplined investing over time, they can be more successful in accumulating wealth than those who own a home.”
And they said most renters aren't. Shout to my alma mater, in the article. FIU.
 
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EndDomination

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City matters so much in this comparison, as does your income, how long you plan on keeping the home, etc.
Pretty much everyone who bought a home in San Jose, Los Angeles, Palo Alto, Sacramento, Manhattan/Brooklyn, DC and cities like those in the last 5-6 years has likely made a massive return on their investment + more.
I also know many people who purchased their homes outright, and the homes have gained value.
 

kingdizzy01

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When I purchase a home my mortgage will be cheaper than my current rent and square footage twice as large.

We'll probably do a 20 year mortgage.

this. here in austin, rent is sometimes higher (and still increasing every new lease) and place is alot smaller vs owning. i bought my house 2 years ago, plannin to sell in maybe 3-4 more years, depending on the market. even though property tax increased my mortgage a tad, my homes value is already up by +$20k.
 
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