• Wrench@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    I rent a house for $4600/mo. To buy this same house in the same neighborhood, it would be roughly $1.6m, tho prices are starting to fall a little on these higher cost neighborhoods, so let’s say $1.5m for a deal.

    With a 20% down-payment on a 30 year fixed rate loan, it would be close to $10000/mo (including insurance and property taxes).

    Also, the lions share of your mortgage goes to paying down interest for the first decade or so.

    So let’s say $1k goes to principle per month. You’re still burning twice as much money owning as renting.

    The only financial upside is that you may be able to sell for more than you paid. Minus Realtor fees, whatever renovations / maintenance you made over the years, etc.

    The current market is insane.

    Edit - so I’m not talking in complete generalities, I glanced at the interest/principal ratio. No idea how accurate this is.

    After a year of mortgage payments, 31% of your money starts to go toward the principal. You see 45% going toward principal after ten years and 67% going toward principal after year 20.

    https://www.americanfinancing.net/mortgage-basics/mortgage-payment-explained

    I don’t know what the ratio is in the first year, maybe 100% interest?

    So at a monthly payment of $9800, $7864 of which is towards mortgage, that’s $2437 / mo towards principal from years 2-9.

    So essentially you’re burning $7363 instead of $4600 for the hope that your house increases in value when you sell it.

    Fiscally speaking. There are a lot of other pros and cons to owning.

    • dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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      58 minutes ago

      That is the state of the buy v rent trade-off on that house TODAY. In 10 years, the rent on that house will go up but the mortgage will stay the same. Regardless of the equity you build in owning (which can be leveraged for other things even if you don’t sell), your “rent” stays fixed while renting goes up every year.

      Companies are able to take longer term stances and can sustain short term losses. They buy a house and keep it for 10 years, long enough that those losses transition to profits.