Should You Rent or Buy?

True cost with breakeven, net worth & opportunity cost.

Renting Costs
Your ongoing rental expenses
Monthly Rent Your current or expected monthly rent payment
$
Annual Rent Increase How much your rent increases per year on renewal
%
Renter's Insurance / mo
$
Security Deposit Typically 1 month's rent. Returned at end of tenancy.
$
Moving / Setup Costs
$
Buying Costs
Mortgage & ownership expenses
Home Price The purchase price of the home you're considering
$
Down Payment Percentage of home price paid upfront. Below 20% triggers PMI.
%
Mortgage Rate Annual interest rate on your mortgage loan
%
Annual Home Appreciation Expected annual % increase in home value. US avg ~4%.
%
Property Tax Rate Annual property tax as % of home value. US avg ~1.1%.
%
Home Insurance / yr Annual homeowners insurance premium. US avg ~$1,500/yr.
$
Annual Maintenance Annual upkeep costs. Rule of thumb: 1% of home value.
%
HOA Fees / mo
$
Closing Costs Upfront fees at purchase: ~2–5% of home price
%
Selling Costs Agent fees + taxes when you sell. Typically 6–8%.
%
Marginal Tax Rate Your income tax bracket. Used to estimate mortgage interest deduction benefit.
%

Results

10 yrs
% /yr
% /yr
Calculating…
saved over period
Breakeven Point
years until buying wins
Total Cost · Rent
—/mo avg
Total Cost · Buy
—/mo avg
Net Worth Δ
equity vs invested
Cumulative Cost Over Time

🏢 Renting — Full Breakdown
Total Rent Paid
Insurance
Initial Costs
Opp. Cost (down pmt)
Deposit Returned
Net Cost
🏡 Buying — Full Breakdown
Mortgage Payments
Property Tax
Insurance + HOA
Maintenance
Closing + Selling
Tax Deduction Savings
Home Equity Gained
Net Cost
⚠️ This calculator is for educational purposes only and provides estimates based on the inputs you provide. Actual costs depend on local market conditions, credit score, loan type, tax situation, and other factors. Consult a licensed financial advisor or mortgage professional before making any decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

The breakeven point is the year when your cumulative cost of buying drops below the cumulative cost of renting. Before that year, renting is cheaper in total; after it, buying has cost you less. It factors in your down payment, mortgage payments, property tax, maintenance, and the opportunity cost of not investing your down payment — versus rent payments and insurance. The shorter the breakeven, the sooner buying makes financial sense.
When you buy, you lock up your down payment and closing costs in an illiquid asset. If you had rented instead, that lump sum could be invested — say in an index fund earning 7% per year. This calculator tracks that lost investment growth as an "opportunity cost" and credits it to the renting side, making the comparison fair. It's one of the most commonly ignored costs in rent vs buy decisions.
Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is required by most lenders when your down payment is below 20% of the home price. It typically costs 0.5–1% of your loan balance per year, added to your monthly payment. PMI automatically cancels once your loan balance drops to 80% of the home's value — this calculator shows you exactly which year that happens for your scenario.
Yes — but only the marginal benefit beyond the standard deduction. In 2024, the standard deduction is $29,200 for married filing jointly ($14,600 single). You only benefit from itemizing if your mortgage interest plus property tax exceeds that threshold. The calculator computes your estimated annual deduction benefit using the marginal tax rate you set, and subtracts it from your buying costs each year.
Buying has large upfront costs — closing costs (2–5%), down payment, and selling costs (5–7%) when you eventually leave. Those fixed costs get amortized over more years the longer you stay, while your rent would keep compounding upward. Additionally, home equity grows and the mortgage balance shrinks, so net worth from buying typically improves substantially after year 5–7. Short horizons (under 3–4 years) almost always favor renting.
This calculator uses standard financial formulas — a fixed-rate amortization schedule, compound appreciation, and compounded investment returns. It produces a reasonable estimate for planning purposes. However, real-world results vary due to local market conditions, tax law changes, actual maintenance costs, and credit score affecting your mortgage rate. Always treat this as a starting point for a conversation with a licensed financial advisor or mortgage professional.