Trulia
reported
this week that homeownership is 45% cheaper than renting in the United States.
Jed Kolko, Trulia’s Chief Economist explained:
“Homeownership is cheaper than
renting in all of the 100 largest metros, by a wide margin. Despite the recent
price rebound, rents continue to rise faster than prices, and mortgage rates
are near record lows.
Homeownership makes the most
financial sense for people whose strong credit scores let them snag the lowest
mortgage rate and who get the biggest benefit from deducting mortgage interest
and property taxes from their income taxes.”
(Trulia’s methodology is
explained here.)
This news did not come as a
surprise to us as we have reported that today’s rental market definitely favors
the landlord. Below is a graph of how rental prices have increased recently and
where they are projected to go over the next few years based on a report from Marcus & Millichap.
It cost
more to rent than own right now. And you don’t get any of your rent back in the
future. History shows us, in the long term, you can build equity in a home. Dr. Ken Johnson earlier
this year explained in a post on this blog:
“It appears that homeownership
creates extra wealth mainly through its ability to force owners to save rather
than through property appreciation. Thus, homeownership appears to be a
self-imposed savings plan, which through time leads to greater wealth
accumulation as compared to comparable renters. In short, buying a home makes
Americans save.”
The Joint Center for Housing
Studies at Harvard University released
a study last year titled America’s Rental Housing: Meeting Challenges, Building on Opportunities.
In the study, they actually quantified the difference in family wealth between
renters and homeowners:
“[R]enters have only a fraction of the net wealth of owners. Near
the peak of the housing bubble in 2007, the median net wealth of homeowners was
$234,600—about 46 times the $5,100 median for renters. Even if
homeowner wealth fell back to 1995 levels, it would still be 27.5 times the
median for renters.”
What Does This All Mean?
We believe David Shulman, senior
economist with the UCLA
Ziman Center for Real Estate said it best:
“The American Dream of
homeownership may be comatose, but it is not dead, and the wake-up call will
come in the form of higher rents.”
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