This rent vs buy calculator compares the long-term cost of staying a renter versus becoming a homeowner over the number of years you plan to stay in the property. It looks at cash flows, equity, and the opportunity cost of investing your money elsewhere.
On the renting side, it projects your rent payments over time based on your current monthly rent and expected annual rent increases. On the buying side, it estimates your mortgage payments, property taxes, maintenance, insurance, HOA fees, and closing costs. It also factors in how your home’s value and your loan balance could change, as well as how your upfront cash might have grown if it were invested instead of used for a down payment and closing costs.
The calculator relies on standard mortgage and growth formulas. The exact implementation may vary slightly, but the main ideas are:
The monthly principal and interest payment is based on the loan amount, interest rate, and loan term.
Where:
Rent is grown each year at your chosen annual rent increase rate.
Where g is your annual rent increase rate and t is the number of years from today.
The calculator grows your home’s value using your annual home appreciation rate and tracks your equity as your loan balance declines.
Instead of buying, you could invest your down payment and closing costs. The calculator estimates the future value of that investment using your chosen investment return rate.
Conceptually:
This amount is compared with the equity you might build as a homeowner.
After you enter your details and run the calculation, the tool will estimate the net financial position of renting versus buying over your planned holding period.
Remember that this is a projection, not a guarantee. Real-world outcomes will differ as interest rates, housing markets, and your personal situation change.
Here is a simplified illustrative scenario to show how the calculator’s logic plays out. These numbers are not predictions, just an example:
Over seven years, renting would total roughly the sum of your evolving rent payments. Buying would produce higher upfront costs (down payment + closing costs) and monthly carrying costs, but you would also build equity as you pay down the mortgage and as the home potentially appreciates. The calculator compares these paths and shows which leaves you with a higher estimated net worth at the end of year seven.
If, for example, the output shows that buying leaves you with $25,000 more net wealth than renting after seven years, that suggests ownership may be financially advantageous in this scenario. If instead renting leaves you with slightly more than buying (say, $5,000), the decision may hinge more on lifestyle priorities than pure dollars.
Each input can tilt the balance between renting and buying. In general:
The table below summarizes how renting and buying differ from a high-level perspective.
| Factor | Renting | Buying |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront costs | Typically first month, last month, and a security deposit | Down payment, closing costs, inspections, possible repairs |
| Monthly payments | Rent (may rise with renewals), renter’s insurance | Mortgage, property taxes, insurance, HOA, maintenance |
| Equity building | No equity; payments are an ongoing expense | Paying down the loan plus potential home price appreciation |
| Flexibility | Usually easier and cheaper to move | Moving often requires selling, paying commissions, and closing costs |
| Market risk | Exposure mainly through rent changes | Direct exposure to changes in home values and interest rates |
| Opportunity cost | More cash may stay invested or liquid | Cash tied up in home equity, but can grow with the property |
This calculator is a simplified financial model intended for education, not personalized advice. Important assumptions and limitations include:
Because of these simplifications, use the results as a starting point for discussion, not as a definitive forecast. For major decisions, consider speaking with a qualified financial advisor, mortgage professional, or real estate expert who understands your full situation.
To get the most from the calculator, experiment with different scenarios. Try shorter and longer "years to stay," adjust rent and appreciation assumptions, and test more conservative and more aggressive investment return rates. Looking at a range of outcomes can help you understand how sensitive your decision is to changes in key assumptions.
Ultimately, the right choice balances the financial picture with your lifestyle, risk tolerance, and goals. This tool is designed to make the money side clearer so you can focus on what matters most to you.