Is it cheaper to rent a home rather than buy?

17,480
0
Published 2024-04-30
With housing prices at record highs, a new study suggests that it’s now more affordable to rent a home rather than buy one. NBC’s Christine Romans joins TODAY to break down the numbers.

» Subscribe to TODAY:    / @today  

About: TODAY brings you the latest headlines and expert tips on money, health and parenting. We wake up every morning to give you and your family all you need to start your day. If it matters to you, it matters to us. We are in the people business. Subscribe to our channel for exclusive TODAY archival footage & our original web series.

Connect with TODAY Online!
Visit TODAY's Website: www.today.com/
Find TODAY on Facebook: www.facebook.com/today
Follow TODAY on Twitter: twitter.com/TODAYshow
Follow TODAY on Instagram: www.instagram.com/todayshow/

» Stream TODAY All Day: www.today.com/allday
About: TODAY All Day is a 24/7 streaming channel bringing you the top stories in news and pop culture, celebrity interviews, cooking, and more. All in one place.

#home #realestate #money

All Comments (21)
  • @danieldavid9887
    The narrative is now trying to spin that renting is better than buying. Don’t drink the juice people - I know it’s hard, but keep working towards home ownership
  • @debbiel8585
    Its the upkeep too. We need a roof. Last time 20 years ago it was 3,500. Now it will be 11,000.
  • @roachtoasties
    Why is Christine Romans comparing the rent of a one bedroom apartment to an average mortgage payment? Those mortgage payments are for a house or condo, not a one bedroom apartment. Anyway, there are lots of variables. If you're planning on staying put for a long time, buying should be better than renting, where your landlord can also increase your rent. In my area rents probably start at about $2,000 for a one bedroom, but I have a three bedroom home where my property taxes and an HOA fee total about $460 per month. The reason why: The mortgage is now paid in full. Adding some extra in there for maintenance, and I'm still way far ahead, and I'm not even including the 100% home equity when I do sell.
  • @lawless37291
    Thank God I bought my home in 2019 at a low interest rate of 2.3%.
  • @Rico34
    👀 It’s not about what’s ‘cheaper’; it’s ALWAYS been about what’s “better”—this will obviously be subjective to each person, but we generally shouldn’t subscribe to always try & live cheap, but rather “good” & think beyond our current circumstances. Not succumbing to the pressures of economics while improving & strengthening your revenue streams is an ideal way to move forward. 🏡 If you’re paying thousands of dollars toward someone else’s mortgage, you still get the lesser end of the stick after 10, 20, 30yrs of doing so.
  • @ASD-DAD
    My 2 bedroom 1100 sqft apt in San Diego is only $3950.
  • Even if I switch to a teacher's salary (65k) later this year in Austin, as a single person it is hard to find any type of affordable housing to buy. I have a chance with a VA loan that might be lower if I can find a new house through a builder that offers lower interest rates.
  • @pswire1117
    If you see what's happening it looks more like the old "Company town" model is coming back, where corporations built and owned the houses they rented to their workers, and also owned the stores that sold goods to the workers, and basically ran a town like a corporate fiefdom. Workers owned nothing and would keep working because they were afraid that being laid off would lead to eviction and homelessness pretty fast.
  • @jondonut1810
    Its cheaper living in a converted van ❤ Boondocking ❤
  • @ryanyoder7573
    This makes being a landlord a losing proposition as it’s too hard to cover costs.
  • @mclogan76
    I am locked in at 2.75% and I am going nowhere! 😂
  • @joanndavis4843
    So at $2,000 a month in say, 30 years of renting= $720,000! Or just start off buying a home half that amount and live their for 30 years= Whatever that mortgage would be. But then you got to figure taxes, fluctuating interest, insurance, assessments, fees, maintenance, utility cost for anything bigger than an apartment, and then you're right back at $720,000!
  • @Mlogan11
    The question shouldn't be what is cheaper TODAY in buying vs renting, but what will be cheaper, 3, 5, 10+ years from now based on how long you're planning to stay in the area. Home and rent prices will move together in tandem and home prices are rising, so will rent, which means in a rising market the home price costs today will likely be cheaper than rent being charged a few years down the line.
  • @jujub4553
    We couldn’t even afford to buy a home if we wanted