The
recent rise in mortgage rates has made buying a house a little more
expensive: the increase in the 30-year fixed rate over the past month
from 3.4% to 3.9% (Freddie Mac)
raised the monthly payment on a $200,000 mortgage by $56, or 6%.
However, because mortgage rates are still near long-term lows, and
because prices fell so much after the housing bubble burst and remain
low relative to rents even after recent price increases, buying is still
much cheaper than renting. That means that the recent jump in rates
doesn't change the rent-versus-buy math much.
Rates are likely to keep rising,
but how far must rates rise before buying a home starts to look
expensive relative to renting? To answer this, we updated our Rent vs. Buy analysis with
the latest asking prices and rents from March, April, and May 2013.
Following our standard approach, we calculated the cost of buying and
renting for identical sets of properties, including maintenance,
insurance, taxes, closing costs, down payment, sales proceeds, and, of
course, the monthly mortgage payment on a 30-year fixed-rate loan with
20% down and monthly rent. We assume people will stay in their homes for
7 years, deduct their mortgage interest
and property tax payments at the 25% tax bracket, and get modest home
price appreciation (see the detailed methodology and example here). Here's what we found:
Buying remains cheaper than
renting so long as mortgage rates are below 10.5%. At 3.9%, the current
30-year fixed rate according to Freddie Mac, buying is 41% cheaper than renting nationally. With a 5% mortgage rate,
buying is still 34% cheaper than renting nationally. Mortgage rates
would have to rise a huge amount – to 10.5% – to tip the math in favor
of renting, which isn't impossible. Rates were that high throughout the
1980s, but have been consistently below 10.5% since May 1990.
[Click to compare mortgage rates from multiple lenders now.]
Each local market, of course, has
its own mortgage rate "tipping point" when renting becomes cheaper than
buying a home. At 3.9%, buying is cheaper than renting in all of the
100 largest metros, which means the tipping point
is above 3.9% everywhere. The tipping point is lowest in San Jose,
which would tip in favor of renting if rates reach 5.2%. It's between 5%
and 6% in San Francisco and Honolulu, and between 6% and 7% in New
York and Orange County, CA.
10 Metros with the Lowest Mortgage-Rate Tipping Point | ||
# | U.S. Metro | Mortgage rate below which buying is cheaper than renting |
1 | San Jose, CA | 5.2% |
2 | San Francisco, CA | 5.4% |
3 | Honolulu, HI | 5.8% |
4 | New York, NY-NJ | 6.8% |
5 | Orange County, CA | 6.8% |
6 | Los Angeles, CA | 7.5% |
7 | San Diego, CA | 7.5% |
8 | Ventura County, CA | 8.0% |
9 | Sacramento, CA | 8.0% |
10 | Oakland, CA | 8.2% |
10 Metros with the Highest Mortgage-Rate Tipping Point | ||
# | U.S. Metro | Mortgage rate below which buying is cheaper than renting |
1 | Detroit, MI | 35.8% |
2 | Memphis, TN-MS-AR | 21.0% |
3 | Gary, IN | 20.8% |
4 | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI | 20.2% |
5 | Toledo, OH | 20.1% |
6 | Cleveland, OH | 20.0% |
7 | Dayton, OH | 19.2% |
8 | Grand Rapids, MI | 18.4% |
9 | Akron, OH | 17.4% |
10 | Kansas City, MO-KS | 16.9% |
But just because buying is cheaper than renting, it doesn't mean you can buy. Lots of people who want to buy don't have the downpayment or can't get a mortgage. Even people who can swing it financially might not be able to buy right away, before rates rise further, because they might not find the home they want quickly with inventory still so tight.
So if the recent increase in mortgage rates doesn't change the rent-versus-buy equation substantially, why does it matter? The main effect is to reduce the demand for refinancing. Unlike home buying, refinancing is a relatively straightforward financial decision: although refinancing has upfront costs, refinancing doesn't require finding a home, thinking hard about your lifestyle, or moving. Since rates have been low for so long, many people who were able to refinance, already have. As a result, the demand for refinancing is now dropping.
For people who haven't yet
refinanced – and for people looking to buy – rising rates do make
housing more expensive. Rates are now on the rise and are likely to keep
rising, thanks to the strengthening economy and the Fed eventually
trying less hard to keep rates low. But it will take big rate increases
to turn off prospective home buyers. At today's prices and rents, rates
would have to rise to levels we haven't seen in 20 years before renting
is cheaper than buying a home on average across the country.
Troy & Denise Schroder
Real Estate Advocates
Keller Wiliams Elite
www.linkme2okc.com
Twitter @troyndenise
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