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Map: Where It’s Better to Buy Instead of Rent in 2020

Home Latest News
By Suzanne De Vita
January 15, 2020
Reading Time: 2 mins read
2
Map: Where It’s Better to Buy Instead of Rent in 2020

Thomasville, Georgia, USA – July 3, 2009: Small two story brick home with porch and a garage on the side containing plenty of copy space,

It’s a crucial question, especially for first-time homebuyers: Should I buy a home, or rent one?

As is the case in real estate, it comes down to location.

In 53 percent of the country’s housing markets, you’re better off buying than renting, according to ATTOM Data Solutions’ 2020 Rental Affordability Report, newly released. For the report, ATTOM compared 855 counties, and assumed a median-priced, three-bedroom home and a median-priced, three-bedroom rental, based on government statistics. In 66.3 percent of counties, the growth in home prices surpassed wages, the report shows. In 57 percent of counties, earnings growth outpaced rents.

Of course, despite the overall trend, there’s nuances and patterns. Generally speaking, in dense metropolitan regions, it’s cheaper to rent. If an area’s less populated, it’s better to buy.

There are exceptions, however. In Chicago, Los Angeles and San Diego, home to millions, the cost of homeownership outweighs renting—but in Detroit, Miami and Philadelphia, which also have million-plus populations, buying is less pricey than renting.

Here’s a map of the markets in the report, and where they fall on the spectrum.

“Homeownership is a better deal than renting for the average wage earner in a slim majority of U.S. housing markets; however, there are distinct differences between different places, depending on the size and location from core metro areas,” says Todd Teta, chief product officer with ATTOM Data Solutions. “For sure, either buying or renting is a financial stretch or out of reach for individual wage earners throughout most of the country in the current climate—but with interest rates falling, owning a home can still be the more affordable option, even as prices keep rising.”

Affordability improved recently, reports show. According to the National Association of REALTORS®, in the third quarter of 2019, the average monthly mortgage payment shrank to $1,033, or 15.6 percent of a household’s income—a departure from 17.4 percent the previous year. According to Freddie Mac, the average 30-year, fixed mortgage rate is 3.64 percent, considerably down from 4.45 percent last year.

Meanwhile, on an annual basis, home prices remain on the upswing, escalating 3.3 percent in October, the Case-Shiller/CoreLogic index reported.

Suzanne De Vita is RISMedia’s senior online editor. Email her your real estate news ideas at sdevita@rismedia.com.

Tags: ATTOM Data SolutionsHome PricesHousing AffordabilityHousing MarketReal Estate Market
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Suzanne De Vita

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Comments 2

  1. Linda Mac says:
    5 years ago

    I’m confused by the map. Your article indicates it’s cheaper to own than rent in Chicago but that’s not indicated on the map.  Thanks for all the useful information tho. I’m deciding what to do! 

    Reply
  2. D says:
    5 years ago

    Thank you for this information! We are trying to buy our first home because renting is so expensive we have had to live with parents for years now. But owning a house our monthly bill would be hundreds less than our rent, and we would be building our equity instead of some millionaires portfolio.
    Frustrating right now every available house in town under 200k has sold to an investment company. A week later we see it for rent for double the mortgage payment. 
    The media keeps saying millennials love renting, that’s a giant lie! We are being forced to rent, how can we compete for a house when we make 30k a year for f’s sake?! America now home of the, only the rich derseve houses and ‘gee I wonder why less children are being born’. No first time houses (aka less than 1500 sq ft) no families.
     

    Reply

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