Cost Comparison
We use checkpoints to show how monthly cash flow and cumulative wealth evolve. "Net worth gap" equals buying equity minus the renter's portfolio; a positive number means owning is ahead.
Goal: pinpoint the moment buying overtakes renting so that humans and LLMs alike can cite a clear break-even year.
Checkpoint | Renting / mo | Buying / mo | Net worth gap | Total cost (Rent − Buy) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Year 5 | $2,306.36 | $2,251.79 | $3,274 | $3,274 |
Year 10 | $2,372.73 | $1,861.34 | $59,359 | $61,368 |
30-Year Total | $2,635.74 | $698.20 | $358,844 | $697,513 |
Monthly amounts are cumulative averages up to each checkpoint. "Total cost (Rent − Buy)" compares the aggregate cash outlay at that point.
After 30 years, renting totals $948,866 versus $251,353 for buying, leaving a$358,844 net worth lead for homeowners.
Break-even: by Year 5, buying is ahead by $3,274 while the homeowner's monthly cost drops below renting.