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All Articles on Buying | Back to Previous Page Advantages of Buying | Home Finance 101 | Preparing to Shop | Your Real Estate Team | Making an Offer | Getting a Mortgage | Inspections | Insurance | Closing the Deal | After You Buy 1) Owning versus Renting, 2) Renting and Inflation, 3) Wealth and Equity
1) Owning versus Renting
Owning may be less expensive then renting
Take your monthly rent, multiply by 200 = purchase price of home Example: $ 750 x 200 = $150,000 In the preceding example, if you were paying rent of $750 per month, you would pay approximately the same amount per month to own a $150,000 home (factoring in tax savings). The costs as a renter in the future are even more important than the costs of rent today. As a renter, you are fully exposed to increases in the cost of living, also known as inflation. A reasonable expectation for annual increases in your rent is 4 percent per year.
2) Renting and Inflation
Once you purchase a particular home, the bulk of your housing costs are not exposed to inflation -- if you use a fixed-rate mortgage to finance the purchase. Therefore, the comparatively smaller property taxes, insurance, and maintenance expenses are the only housing costs you will have that may increase over time with inflation. In the decades ahead, you will be glad you purchased a home today because as illustrated, renting long term can expose your housing costs (rent) to inflation.
3) Wealth and Equity
Home equity (which is the difference between the market value of a home and the outstanding loan on the home) will help your personal and financial situation in a number of ways. If you plan to someday retire, your home's equity can help supplement your other sources of retirement income. Tapping into equity
Another way to tap your home's equity is through borrowing. Your home's equity may be an easily tapped and low-cost source of cash (the interest you pay is generally tax-deductible). Some retirees also consider what's called a reverse mortgage. Under this arrangement, the lender sends you a monthly check you can spend however you want. Meanwhile, a debt balance (that will be paid off when the property is finally sold) is built up against the property.
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