• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Dava Behrens, Real Estate Broker

Dava Real Estate

  • About
    • About Dava
    • Historic Homes
    • Luxury Homes
    • Testimonials
  • Blog
    • Buyers
    • General Real Estate Information
    • Historic Success Stories
    • Listings
    • Statistics
    • Success Stories
  • Sellers
  • Buyers
  • Resources
  • Social

How Misunderstandings about Affordability Could Cost You

June 11, 2021 by Dava

How Misunderstandings about Affordability Could Cost You | MyKCM

There’s a lot of discussion about affordability as home prices continue to appreciate rapidly. Even though the most recent index on affordability from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) shows homes are more affordable today than the historical average, some still have concerns about whether or not it’s truly affordable to buy a home right now.

When addressing this topic, there are various measures of affordability to consider. However, very few of the indexes compare the affordability of owning a home to renting one. In a paper just published by the Urban Institute, Homeownership Is Affordable Housing, author Mike Loftin examines whether it’s more affordable to buy or rent. Here are some of the highlights included.

1. Renters pay a higher percentage of their income toward their rental payment than homeowners pay toward their mortgage.

The report explains:

“When we look at the median housing expense ratio of all households, the typical homeowner household spends 16 percent of its income on housing while the typical renter household spends 26 percent. This is true, you might say, because people who own their own home must make more money than people who rent. But if we control for income, it is still more affordable to own a home than to rent housing, on average.”

Here’s the data from the report shown in a graph:

How Misunderstandings about Affordability Could Cost You | MyKCM

2. Renters don’t have extra money to invest in other assets.

The report goes on to say:

“Buying a home is not a decision between investing in real estate versus investing in stocks, as financial advisers often claim. Instead, the home buying investment simply converts some portion of an existing expense (renting) into an investment in real estate.”

It explains that you still have a housing expense (rent payments) even if you don’t buy a home. You can’t live in your 401K, but you can transfer housing expenses to your real estate investment. A mortgage payment is forced savings; it goes toward building equity you will likely get back when you sell your home. There’s no return on your rent payments.

3. Your mortgage payment remains relatively the same over time. Your rent keeps going up.

The report also notes:

“Whereas renters are continuously vulnerable to cost increases, rising home prices do not affect homeowners. Nobody rebuys the same home every year. For the homeowner with a fixed-rate mortgage, monthly payments increase only if property taxes and property insurance costs increase. The principal and interest portion of the payment, the largest portion, is fixed. Meanwhile, the renter’s entire payment is subject to inflation.

Consequently, over time, the homeowner’s and renter’s differing trajectories produce starkly different economic outcomes. Homeownership’s major affordability benefit is that it stabilizes what is likely the homeowner’s biggest monthly expense, assuming a buyer has a fixed-rate mortgage, which most American homeowners do. The only portion of the homeowner’s housing expenses that can increase is taxes and insurance. The principal and interest portion stays the same for 30 years.”

A mortgage payment remains about the same over the 30 years of the mortgage. Here’s what rents have done over the last 30 years:

How Misunderstandings about Affordability Could Cost You | MyKCM

4. If you want to own a home and can afford it, waiting could cost you.

As the report also indicates:

“We need to stop seeing housing as a reward for financial success and instead see it as a critical tool that can facilitate financial success. Affordable homeownership is not the capstone of economic well-being; it is the cornerstone.”

Homeownership is the first rung on the ladder of financial success for most households, as their home is most often their largest asset.

Bottom Line

If the current headlines reporting a supposed drop-off in home affordability are making you nervous, let’s connect to go over the real insights into our area.

Filed Under: Buyers Tagged With: affordability, assets, Buyers, financial wealth, Home For Sale, homeownership, house for sale, invest, investment, mortgage payment, Real Estate, rent vs buy, steady

More Posts

The Price You Set Can Make (or Break) Your Sale

January statistics bar graph chart.

January 2026 Monthly Real Estate Statistics

Top 3 Reasons To Buy a Home Before Spring

Elderly couple using a tablet together.

Why So Many Homeowners Are Downsizing Right Now

Primary Sidebar

SEARCH FOR HOMES

Blog Posts by Category

  • ABR
  • Buyers
  • General Real Estate Information
  • Guides
  • Historic Success Stories
  • Listings
  • Sellers
  • Seniors
  • SRES
  • Statistics
  • Success Stories

Contact Me


  • Corvallis, Oregon
  • 541-740-3844
  • dava@davarealestate.com

Ask Dava a question


Subscribe to My Monthly E-Newsletter!

* indicates required
/* real people should not fill this in and expect good things - do not remove this or risk form bot signups */

Intuit Mailchimp

Follow Dava on Instagram

Footer

CONNECT WITH ME ON

  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 

Premiere Property Group, LLC An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity.

Dava Behrens is a Licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Oregon. For important information regarding representation in the state of Oregon refer to Oregon Real Estate Agency Disclosure Pamphlet.


Disclaimer: Listings based on information from Willamette Valley Multiple Listing Service, which neither guarantees nor is in any way responsible for its accuracy. All data is provided ‘AS IS’ and with all faults. Data maintained by Willamette Valley Multiple Listing Service may not reflect all real estate activity in the market.


Privacy Policy: It is my policy to never release information regarding your inquiries to third parties. In the event you provide an email address, name, phone number and/or street address, that information will be used only for the purposes intended and will not be shared with others.

Buyer & Seller Advisories