01/15/2024
Should You Buy or Rent? A Quick Formula to See
You know the story by now: Canada has long had a housing shortage, but a one-two punch of sky-high demand and painfully high interest rates has made homes wildly unaffordable. Which is upsetting for many folks because, as your parents probably told you, owning a home is one of the most reliable ways to build wealth. Or is it? One question that’s been overlooked amid the housing-crisis brouhaha is whether buying a house is still the best move financially. It’s a tricky question, because there are a million things to consider when weighing whether to rent or buy (which we’ll get into). So we won't pretend there’s a magical way to make the right call. Still, there is a calculation that can point you in the right direction, and it’s called the price-to-rent ratio.
The Price-to-Rent Ratio
To get a ballpark guess whether renting or buying will build you more wealth long term, take the purchase price of a home and divide it by the annual cost of renting a similar place. If the result is 17ish or lower, you’re likely better off buying. If the number lands at or near 20, it could go either way. And if the ratio far exceeds 23, you should probably keep cutting your landlord a check each month. Why does this work? Because you’re essentially measuring whether a home for sale is overpriced relative to a comparable rental unit and, in a roundabout way, whether renting or buying will let you invest (and likely grow your money) more.
Give me an example! In the fall, the average Canadian home cost $650,000, while the typical rental unit went for $2,178 a month, or $26,136 a year. That’s a ratio of about 25, which suggests the scales tilted slightly toward renting (if you assume the home appreciates a pretty conservative 3.3% annually). Now let’s say that in January rent rises to $2,800 a month (or $33,600 a year). In that case, the ratio, at 19, tilts toward buying, provided you can still buy a comparable place for $650,000.