Should I buy or rent a house?

Million Rupee question “Should I buy or rent a house?” because in most of metro cities you can’t buy a decent flat which is under Rs 50 Lakh. In Real Estate series we have already covered “Indian Real Estate Bubble” & “Real Estate Affordability”. Today we are touching yet another sensitive issue or “Oh My God!” thing. If you have not seen movie OMG – let me share that people don’t appreciate & even stand against person who give different views than normal belief. Buying house is as sacred as praying to God in India & there must be lot of pressure if you don’t own one.

Disclaimer: I own a decent house & I am biased towards buying a house before retirement – 100% of my clients who don’t own a house are having this as a goal. But few questions are buying today or after few years – buying in heart of city or suburbs – buying in city where you are currently working or buying at native place or the place where finally you would like to live after retirement.

When buying a house is no brainer

  • When house price are low
  • Expected appreciation in property is high
  • When interest rate is less
  • When rents are high

We can’t quantify the numbers for above points but still most of the indicators are not in favor of home buyers. So it’s not a cake walk & you have to be much more prudent and do your calculation than people who bought properties in last 5-6 years.

House is a liability – Robert Kiyosaki

Robert Kiyosaki is a big fan of property investment but surprisingly he calls House a liability. Why – check this Video. You may not agree with his definition of asset & liabilities in this specific case but we can add another angle which will draw a line between house is an Asset or Liability or Need. Check this image & tell me who is wealthy.

Buying Vs Renting

The House which looks like a house from a fairy tale was owned by Michael Jackson, the second one which looks like an average house belongs to Warren Buffet.

  • Michael Jackson was bankrupt as he bought a house which was a ranch and then made a zoo and an amusement park inside. His house was his biggest liability due to EMI &maintenance cost.
  • While, Warren Buffet is still one of the wealthiest person in the world.

So you should know your limits – you should not overspend in buying house. House is not a show off thing. Make it comfortable to stay and not unaffordable to maintain.

Buying Vs Renting House

Coming back to our core agenda of today – let’s evaluate which makes more sense right now. Answer can be different for everyone so do your calculation or talk to your financial planner before taking final call.

I did some calculation using MSN Calculator – you can find calculator link after the screen shots. (ignore $ signs)

My Example

MSN1

I have assumed rate of flat price increase at 5% – because I thought let’s not take it negative and scare the readers who are reading this. 🙂 You can take your own assumptions but if its higher than 8-10% – go & check HDFC chart here 1995 to 2012 (rate less than 5%). But if price double by next year don’t come running to me.

I have assumed both husband & wife are working and will be able to get maximum benefit by paying interest on home loan (section 24) – which is Rs 150000 each or Rs 300000 combined.  (In US 100% interest is allowed to be reduced from income for tax calculation purpose)

Comparison

MSN2

Above calculation show that I am having marginal benefit in renting a house rather than buying. You can share your views in comment section.

Detailed Calculation

MSN3

Buying Vs Renting Calculators

You can do your own calculations with MSN Calculator (ignore dollar sign) – You can also try The Wealth Wishers calculator – its excel based & Indianised – click here  (make sure to add ZERO in total amount of deduction for principal payment as we have n number of options for availing 80C benefit).

Views from Other People

Khan Academy who are pioneer in Online Education are having 2 videos on Rent Vs Buying

Economic Times wrote

The case against buying becomes even more compelling if you are an investor, not an end user. The rental yield, which is the annual rent of a property as a percentage of its market price, has steadily dipped in urban areas. In overheated markets, it works out to merely 1-1.25%. In other words, a Rs 1 crore property will fetch a monthly rent of only Rs 8,000-10,000. Experts say that if the rental yield is below 4%, the investment is not worthwhile. This is especially true if the cost of capital is high. What you pay as interest on the loan will neutralize any gain from the property.

Buy Vs Rent ET

Srivatsan who added “Fools buy houses… Wise men live in them” comment on last post shared these calculations:

If house price is over 25 times the current annual rent you are paying, postpone buying the house!!!

For example, let rent paid = 9000 pm = 1.08lacsp.a
If cost of house = 30lacs, ratio = 30/1.08 > 25!!!

If buying a house for 30lacs @11% home loan rate and letting it for rent, then minimum rent should be 12500 pm!

Max 2.5 times your income should be overall debt to buy a home. If you are taking 30 lakh loan, your annual income must be atleast 12 lakhs!

Your total housing payment should not exceed 30% of your net income. To afford EMI of 30k pm, your net income should be atleast 100k pm!

Next Post: In last 3 posts we talked mostly about buying first house – what about if we are talking about investment in real estate. It’s human nature to play safe and not to indulge in risky matters & people thing buying property is the safest thing. Investment in real estate sector has different parameters to consider but basic concepts of return and risk apply in this domain also. I will cover this in next post.

I believe you must be having some idea after reading this post & using calculators. Anyways, last suggestion “take cool headed decision”. Buying a property is a huge decision where you invest what you have; you build liability and pay a part of your future earnings to claim the clear title. So your decision has to be well thought and well believed.

48 COMMENTS

  1. Again very nice analysis. This is how I would like to interpret this.
    If I can manage 30% of net tkhome towards EMI, 30-40% towards all other goals and 40-30% towards expenses then I can manage to buy a house.
    If my rent is less than 30% of tkhome then I am comfortable.
    However I think it is extremely important to look at all priority financial goals like retirement child’s expenses etc. before taking the plunge to get a loan.
    This means I will have to settle for a house as determined by the EMI amt and not by my dreams. I will have to live an extremely frugal lifestyle and take into account future monthly expenses. My job stability and my salary stability are crucial. If they bound to fluctuate it will be a problem.
    Of course I cant get into any other loans or debt.

    This is all too rosy. The ground reality is inflation in India is close to 10% for almost all goals. This means I have to save 30-40% of tkhome without fail or the goals will suffer. So it is walking the tightrope.
    Buying a house I think for most implies reshaping ALL their dreams short and long term. I think it is very important to be mentally prepared for this.

    Two earning members make a big difference.
    one big advantage of getting an own house is one can reverse mortgage it to fund retirement provided there is enough residual life on the property (~ 20 years: buying a house in mid 30s should be okay I guess not sure)
    This will take care of a major worry provided my children are independent.

    • Hi Pattu,
      Thanks for sharing insight – this was awesome “Buying a house I think for most implies reshaping ALL their dreams short and long term.”
      Reverse Mortgage is not picking in India due to all BLACK & white reasons + emotions & family pressure.

  2. Jagbir has made a very comment in the WealthWishers article.

    The purchase price of the house and rent paid seem to be crucial. The rent should accurately reflect the value of the house. Generally for low rent, renting wins. If I am renting a house worth 40L and want to buy a 60 L house then renting will obviously be better I guess.

    • I am not sure property price will correct or not but wait for some time you may find great rent deals. Property price can depend on anything but rent depend clearly on combination of demand-supply & affordability.

  3. The assumptions seems to be good but for how long can a person live in a rented house? At sometime in his life I am sure every person will give more than just a thought to buy a house. It gives an immense satisfaction to have a own house. Now I am not sure whether these calculations are right because this article does not tell in clarification that a house rent will remain same for 20 years. Every year, there will be a hike in the rent by at least Rs. 1000 in metro cities plus the house deposit that you have to pay at initial stages.Surely thats not the case with the EMI. From a nationalized bank the EMI is fixed for at least3-5 years.

      • Hi Hemant,

        Yes I did miss that… So, what is the reason behind this property hike since last 8 years as you said. I remember once you said that, if you want to purchase a house, it should be on the basis of living requirement and should not be concerned with the current rate of interest and I completely agree with that.

        • Hi Manoj,
          There can be many reasons but 2 main reasons that comes to my mind are – property was available cheap as there was no increase in prices in that decade & Indian growth story with high employment that made it more affordable.

  4. dear hemant.

    There are few things in this world that cant be thought of in terms of money only. owing a house is one of them.

    Though on first look, it seems to be marginally financially in favor of renting, but satisfaction of having a house in immense. i am myself living on rent (20,000/month for 2 BHK in delhi) and looking to buy a house on a big loan amount.
    as a tenant, i am never called upon the society meetings about some important discussion about the society . Also, my annual increment is 10% , not 5 % as u have shown in the calculation. these days, an owner never wants to have a tenant for more than few years and hassles of changing house several time in your life time with children, hampering their studies is not a good practice.

    • Hi Dr Nitin,
      I clearly mentioned that I am biased towards buying house – for the reasons that you have mentioned & many more but right NOW buying decision is not that easy.
      Anyways as we write govt. is asking RBI to ease loan to home buyers
      “The finance ministry has asked the Reserve Bank to consider giving infrastructure status to the housing sector, and relax provisioning norms for it so banks can extend attractive loans to buyers.”

    • Nitin Agarwal from GD?. Just guessing.
      I want to bring a new point in here. For many of our cases we have family home….may be not in metros, may be suburb or villages…but we forget that and behave as if we are not man enough or women enough if we don’t posses a house of our own. We have forget the beautiful philosophy the earth has lot to feel our needs but not our greed. Can we not reuse those houses which our parents or ancestors have built and save wealth, environment and energy. Obviously I know people leave in Metros to work (I myself do) and need a house , but will renting not suffice and when u are over may be with you job life, go back and settle in your roots.
      That way it will be better than to- buy and invest, and forget age old concept of – reuse and return to root.
      I feel it is a big sock for some to return to those old town’s or suburbs which lack many facility but I feel it’s more a mental attitude then actual physical problem.
      Need of a house is like need to show power that I too have Buying capacity but that do so much wastage to environment, energy, wealth everything.
      Even Bhagwat gita says to reuse and reconcile and not to give in to greed and show of power.
      Peoples who don’t have such ancestral homes to fall back on can please Ignore me kindly.

      • Hi Subhojit,

        Your comment is so interesting that I couldn’t stop myself commenting on this. This society has both kinds of people. People with own houses and people living on rental. Imagine if everybody wants to live on rental basis then who will buy a house or vice versa. Coming back to your point I think its very good idea to revert back to the old living days only if the entire family lives with you of all generations. For me and for many I guess the definition of a house is that a house only depends on the family atmosphere rather than show off. If parents, grand parents and children live together and happily wherever it may be, that is what a home is all about.

  5. Nice analysis but I feel there are two other points should have been considered

    a) depreciation on the asset / life of the asset
    b) buying a flat or individual house – as land share will be higher in case of individual house and there is no depreciation on the land

    Thanks

    • Hi Rama,
      You rightly said but there can be n number of permutation combination which are beyond scope of any article.

  6. I bought a flat for 12-13L in 2004 when few of my relatives made a fun of me saying to me “What a fool, who will invest 12L in real estate” . Now the current value of the same property is 60L (and ~75L if you can find new construction in the area) and the same relatives are saying ” We were fools to not to buy the house then”

  7. Thanks for refering to the calculator and informative article.

    Pattu,
    Your comments also helped. Thanks.

  8. Excellent article with nice data points in favour of both. One thing i did not understand about the calculation: What is opportunity cost and how is it calculated?

    • Hi Sid,
      Opportunity cost is – if you invest that amount at some other place or some other investment avenue.

  9. You mentioned that the total housing payment should not exceed 30% of annual income. However, isnt it true that while annual income might increase by 10%, the housing payment is by and large fixed for the entire duration of the loan. In which case, the % of annual income towards housing payment will keep decreasing over time and hence, you can afford to buy a house with as much as 50-60% of annual income towards housing payment in the first year.
    I have talked to several people in their 40s whose monthly EMI is in the 15-20k range, which was very high when they first bought the house, but is hardly a pain now.
    Please let me know your views on this or if i have made an error in the assumptions

  10. I am totally agreed with Manoj.. We can’t judge or weighted every thing on investment parameters… Spend hole life in renting house not practically possible… Upper calculation also required to include shifting charges, agent commission , security deposits etc and mental harassment when your landlord want house vacant on short notice… and at last not least we are human beings we also have some desired goals too..

    • I am a businessman involved in spare parts manufacturing business. I have never own a house in my life. My age is 72 years and I still rent a house. I have my own house at my native place, but no house in Mumbai. Renting gives you pleasure to change your houses when you are bored with them. Good article by Mr. Hemant Beniwal, but I would like to tell you that we write anything or explain anything, different people have different mentalities and they get what they deserve when they are old. Business people will do business anyhow and rat racers will participate in rat race. If real estate was really that lucrative, then we would not have got any plot/flat vacant yet. All politicians have bought the lands and plots and would not have sold them.

      I wud like to point out also that whoever says that changing the rental apartments is a problem for them as well as their kids, I wud just like to inform them that we should not be so ambitious about our own rat race that we should spoil our life just thinking about living houses. Thanks.

  11. Really good one!! I’m also agree with rented house is benificial than buying .
    But how about returns??? we wont get anything for paid rent money.

  12. Very nice article. One question on this – “Max 2.5 times your income should be overall debt to buy a home”. There are two parts while buying home – down payment & loan. Does this mean that, if we have the cash, it is ok to give any amount as down payment as long as loan amount is <2.5 annual income? or is there any limit/formula on the total value of the house?

    • Hi Ashish,

      There is no specified formula or limit to buy a home but this is an ideal situation to keep the total debt within these limits.

  13. Hi

    That was a great analysis. I have been observing from many years, the very people who bost of their properities in real value are mostly inheritors rather than the real buyers. For them the pains undertaken by their fathers or forefathers to ensure the real estate property are totally forgotten because they are not alive today. Even after assuming that today”s real estate is worth buying for future generation imagine the pain the parents have to go through their entire life. I have seen people who have sold the properties made by their fathers or forefathers indulging in financial indiscipline, have lost the complete advantage and have become almost like beggers. You can see this very much happening in Bangalore where there is no logic behind the escalation of the real estate prices compared to the infrastructure development if so. Very few people understand the values in life and make the best out of it while they are alive. The sacrifices which the parents and forefathers have made through mere ingnorance are not at all appreciated in todays generation. I may be wrong in front of my relatives, peers, friends, brothers and systers, still I am living in a rented property after selling my own property for a premium and the returns are taking care of all my expenses including my investments. Continue the good work of educating the people. Simple – Ask them to read RICH DAD POOR DAD

  14. well analysis by u. but real state investment is destination of choice of everyone. I can’t purchage a flat at present.

  15. If buying a house for 30lacs @11% home loan rate and letting it for rent, then minimum rent should be 12500 pm!

    What is the formula here? How should one calculate this?

  16. The information you said is really true and we are unable to find any cheap land to buy and also if seen so much number of disadvantages with it. If bought building a house is a great life time task in humans life time. It is a dream to have a own house like the same for me too. Rentals and maintenance with all other expenses goes high so without an standard income earnings we are unable to plan any purchase of home with home loans as RBI often changes interest rates and inflation also high day by day.

  17. Very informative article gave some insight for first time buyer .
    Also wanted to know if size also matters here ?as I have seen some people buy or rent houses that are too big and pay extra for that extra space .can size also be a factor while deciding between the buying and renting ?may be buying a bigger house but renting a small house or vice Versa.
    Thanks

  18. I’m paying Rs. 6k monthly as a rent for 1HK(300 sq. feet) to my flat owner.
    Flat is located at Pune, Kothrud depot in decent locality. Am I paying too much for this 1HK flat?

  19. Hi Hemant,

    Thanks for the nice article.

    Could you give some info on how one comes across these calculations?

    If house price is over 25 times the current annual rent you are paying, postpone buying the house!!!

    Max 2.5 times your income should be overall debt to buy a home. If you are taking 30 lakh loan, your annual income must be atleast 12 lakhs!

  20. i did the math for myself.. and renting was the no-brainer decision. And I haven’t even factored the benefits of the freedom to move wherever better prospects are, which is easier when you live on rent compared to when owning a home.

  21. buying and renting a house is same stategy. only anyhow there should be small loss when we buy a house, but there is a option to own a house independantly.
    but at the same, with the same house till we must be stay by paying the emi, even with lot many difficulties around it, when it is come to rented house, its a easy process where it can be easily relocate based on our requirement as well, finding may difficult but locating ourself is easy. if any financial crisis arise, we can easily adjusted with less rented house ratio as per our needs. instead of compromising and making ourself digging in own house, better is to be in rented well furnished house.

  22. Hi,
    I have a Q regarding buying apartment for renting by selling the plot vs keeping the plot for appreciation in future.
    If I sell a plot I can buy three 2BHK apartments in decent area and will get 10 k each rent in Bangalore. what if i don’t sell the plot and keep it for future appreciation ?
    which one will be more beneficial ?
    thanks

  23. Great post which analyses each pro and cons of buying and Renting. This helps me to make a wise decision between buying and renting. Thanks for sharing this post.

  24. Hi,
    This is nice article you shared great information i have read it thanks for giving such a wonderful Blog for reader.

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