Saturday, July 18, 2026

IS HOMEOWNERSHIP REALLY WORTH IT? Before You Sign a Thirty-Year Mortgage, Take Out a Calculator

 


IS HOMEOWNERSHIP REALLY WORTH IT?

Before You Sign a Thirty-Year Mortgage, Take Out a Calculator

Introduction

For generations, Americans have been sold a dream.

Buy a house.

Put down roots.

Build equity.

Stop throwing your money away on rent.

Own something.

Create wealth.

Leave something behind for your children.

We have heard these statements so many times and for so many years that most of us no longer question them. Homeownership has become more than a financial decision. It has become a symbol of success. We look at the person who owns a home and assume that person is building wealth. We look at the person who rents and sometimes assume that person is wasting money.

But what if we have been looking at the equation incorrectly?

What if homeownership is not always the incredible financial investment we have been led to believe it is?

What if, for millions of people, owning a home is actually an extraordinarily expensive luxury disguised as an investment?

I want you to think about this differently.

I am not telling you that no one should ever buy a home. I am not telling you that real estate cannot appreciate. I am not telling you that people have not made tremendous amounts of money owning property. Of course they have.

What I am asking you to do is something remarkably simple.

Take out a calculator.

Stop looking only at what you paid for your house and what you believe it is worth today.

Instead, calculate what you have actually spent to own it.

Every dollar.

Your down payment.

Your mortgage payments.

Your mortgage interest.

Your property taxes.

Your homeowners insurance.

Your lawn service.

Your pool service.

Your pest control.

Your homeowners association fees.

Your roof.

Your air conditioning system.

Your water heater.

Your appliances.

Your plumbing repairs.

Your electrical repairs.

Your painting.

Your flooring.

Your landscaping.

Your tree removal.

Your pressure washing.

Your windows.

Your doors.

Your irrigation system.

Your fence.

Your driveway.

Your closing costs when you purchased the home.

And then, when you finally decide to sell, calculate the cost of selling it.

Now ask yourself a question.

Did you really make as much money as you think you did?

We love to hear someone say, “I bought my house for $400,000 and sold it for $600,000. I made $200,000.”

Did you?

Did you really make $200,000?

Or did you simply sell the house for $200,000 more than you originally paid for it?

Those are two entirely different statements.

If you owned that home for ten, fifteen, or twenty years, how much money did you pour into that property during those years?

How much did you pay in interest?

How much did you pay in taxes?

How much did you pay in insurance?

How much did you pay to maintain it?

How much did you spend updating it so someone would eventually want to buy it?

How much did you pay to sell it?

And perhaps one of the most overlooked questions of all, what could the money you used for your down payment and continuing ownership expenses have earned somewhere else?

This is called opportunity cost.

If you put $80,000 down on a house, that $80,000 did not disappear. It became part of the property. But it was also no longer available for another investment.

What might $80,000 have become over twenty years if it had been invested?

What might the thousands of additional dollars you spent every year maintaining your home have become if they had been invested?

These are uncomfortable questions because they challenge one of America's most deeply rooted financial beliefs.

The belief that buying a home is always financially superior to renting.

It is not.

Sometimes it is.

Sometimes it is not.

And sometimes, when you calculate every expense honestly, homeownership may be one of the most expensive financial commitments you will ever make.

So before you sign a mortgage, before you empty your savings account for a down payment, and before you tell yourself that renting is throwing money away, I want you to consider another possibility.

Maybe homeownership is not everything it is cracked up to be.

Maybe the American dream comes with a very expensive invoice.

And maybe it is time we actually read the invoice.

THE $2,000 A MONTH MORTGAGE

Let us begin with a very simple example.

Suppose your mortgage payment is $2,000 a month.

That is $24,000 a year.

Over ten years, you will have made $240,000 in mortgage payments.

Over twenty years, you will have made $480,000 in mortgage payments.

Now, I need to be fair.

Not every dollar of that mortgage payment is an expense in the traditional sense. Depending on the loan, part of the payment goes toward principal. That principal reduction increases your equity.

But a significant portion, particularly during the earlier years of a traditional mortgage, can go toward interest.

That is money paid for the privilege of borrowing money.

Look at an amortization schedule sometime.

You may be shocked.

People proudly say, “I own my home.”

Do you?

Or do you own a percentage of it while a financial institution has a very significant financial interest in the rest?

Miss enough payments, and you may quickly discover the difference between feeling like an owner and having a lender with a secured interest in your property.

The $2,000 monthly payment also creates another financial reality.

That money must be paid every month.

Good month or bad month.

Healthy or sick.

Employed or unemployed.

Business booming or business struggling.

The mortgage does not care.

Twenty-four thousand dollars a year.

Two hundred forty thousand dollars over ten years.

Four hundred eighty thousand dollars over twenty years.

Again, some of that builds equity.

But when people calculate their home investment, they often conveniently ignore the total cash that flowed out of their bank account to maintain that ownership.

Why?

Because if we included everything, the numbers might not look nearly as exciting.

NOW LET US CUT THE GRASS AND CLEAN THE POOL

Let us say you pay $150 a month for lawn service.

That is $1,800 a year.

Now let us say you have a pool and pay another $150 a month for pool service.

That is another $1,800 a year.

Combined, that is $3,600 every year.

Over ten years, you have spent $36,000.

Over twenty years, you have spent $72,000.

Seventy-two thousand dollars.

To cut the grass and maintain the pool.

Of course, someone will say, “Bill, I cut my own grass.”

Wonderful.

Someone else will say, “I maintain my own pool.”

Wonderful.

But your time has value.

You bought the lawn mower.

You bought the gasoline or paid for electricity.

You bought the trimmer.

You bought the blower.

You bought the chemicals.

You bought the pool equipment.

You replaced the pool pump.

You replaced the filter.

There is almost always a cost.

The question is whether we are willing to calculate it.

Homeowners have an interesting habit of mentally erasing small recurring expenses.

One hundred fifty dollars does not sound like much.

Another $150 does not sound like much.

But multiply those numbers by twelve months.

Then multiply them by ten years.

Then multiply them by twenty years.

Suddenly, the little expenses are not little anymore.

They have become tens of thousands of dollars.

THE HOUSE IS ALWAYS HUNGRY

A house eats money.

There. I said it.

The older the house becomes, the hungrier it can become.

One month, it is the air conditioner.

The next month, it is the refrigerator.

Then the dishwasher starts leaking.

The water heater goes out.

The roof needs attention.

A toilet runs.

A pipe leaks.

The garage door stops working.

The irrigation system breaks.

A tree needs to be removed.

The exterior needs painting.

The interior needs painting.

The carpet needs replacing.

The floors look old.

The kitchen looks dated.

The bathroom needs remodeling.

The windows need attention.

The fence begins leaning.

Something is always aging.

Something is always wearing out.

Something is always one strange noise away from costing you money.

Let us use your example and estimate $10,000 a year for repairs, maintenance, replacement, and updating on an older family home.

Some years you may spend $2,000.

Another year you may spend $25,000.

The point is to look at a long-term average.

At $10,000 a year, you have spent $100,000 over ten years.

Over twenty years?

$200,000.

Two hundred thousand dollars.

Now tell me again how much money you made when you sold your house.

This is where the homeownership mythology begins to collide with financial reality.

You cannot simply say, “I paid $400,000 and sold it for $600,000, so I made $200,000.”

What did the house cost you while you owned it?

If you spent $200,000 maintaining, repairing, replacing, and improving the property over twenty years, shouldn't that money be part of your calculation?

Of course it should.

But most people do not calculate it that way.

Why?

Because the truth may ruin the story.

PROPERTY TAXES NEVER STOP KNOCKING

Now let us add property taxes.

Suppose property taxes average $5,000 a year.

Over ten years, that is $50,000.

Over twenty years, that is $100,000.

And depending on where you live and the value of your property, $5,000 may sound wonderfully inexpensive.

Some homeowners pay substantially more.

People sometimes talk about paying off their home and living “mortgage free.”

Mortgage-free does not mean cost-free.

The tax bill still arrives.

The insurance bill still arrives.

The roof still ages.

The air conditioner still breaks.

The lawn still grows.

The pool still needs chemicals.

The house still requires money.

You may own the property outright, but ownership continues to carry an annual cost.

That is the reality we rarely put on the real estate brochure.

LET US ADD UP OUR SIMPLE EXAMPLE

Now let us use only the numbers we have discussed.

Mortgage payments: $24,000 a year.

Lawn and pool service: $3,600 a year.

Repairs, maintenance, replacements, and improvements: $10,000 a year.

Property taxes: $5,000 a year.

Total annual cash outflow in our simplified example?

$42,600.

Over ten years?

$426,000.

Over twenty years?

$852,000.

Read that number again.

Eight hundred fifty-two thousand dollars.

Now, before someone jumps out of their chair, let me repeat something extremely important.

The $852,000 is gross cash outflow under our hypothetical assumptions. It is not the same as saying the homeowner lost $852,000. Part of the mortgage payments may have built equity. Some improvements may have added value. The property may have appreciated significantly.

But that is exactly my point.

We need an honest accounting.

We cannot count every dollar of appreciation as profit while pretending the dollars spent achieving and maintaining ownership never existed.

And we have not even included homeowners insurance.

We have not included closing costs.

We have not included homeowners association fees.

We have not included pest control.

We have not included major storm repairs.

We have not included furniture purchased specifically for the home.

We have not included the cost of moving.

We have not included the opportunity cost of the down payment.

We have not included the cost of selling.

The true cash commitment could be considerably higher.

So I ask again.

Is homeownership really worth it?

THE DOWN PAYMENT NOBODY TALKS ABOUT

Suppose you purchase a $400,000 home and put $80,000 down.

People say, “The $80,000 is in the house. It is equity.”

Correct.

But where else could that $80,000 have been?

Suppose, purely as an illustration, that $80,000 earned an average annual return of 7 percent over twenty years.

Without adding another dollar, it could theoretically grow to approximately $309,000.

That is not a guarantee.

Markets rise and fall.

Investments carry risk.

Taxes and fees matter.

But the example demonstrates opportunity cost.

Your down payment has a cost beyond the check you write.

It is capital.

Once committed to the house, it is not simultaneously invested somewhere else.

Now imagine that a renter also invested part of the money he or she did not spend on major home repairs, property taxes, lawn care, pool care, and other ownership expenses.

Would every renter do that?

Absolutely not.

That is one of the strongest arguments for homeownership.

A mortgage can act like forced savings.

Many homeowners gradually build equity because they are required to make payments.

Many renters will not invest the difference. They will spend it.

But for the financially disciplined person, the rent versus buy equation may look dramatically different.

If you rent and aggressively invest your savings, renting may not be throwing money away.

It may simply be a different financial strategy.

“BUT MY HOUSE WENT UP $200,000!”

Wonderful.

Now show me the entire ledger.

What did you pay in interest?

What did you pay in property taxes?

What did you pay in insurance?

What did you pay in maintenance?

What did you pay for the roof?

What did you pay for the air conditioners?

What did you pay for the new kitchen?

What did you pay for the bathrooms?

What did you pay for the flooring?

What did you pay for landscaping?

What did you pay for the pool?

What did you pay in closing costs?

What did you pay to sell the property?

And what return did you give up on the money you invested in the house?

Then we can talk about profit.

The problem is that homeowners frequently confuse appreciation with profit.

If an asset increases in value by $200,000 but costs you an enormous amount of money to finance, carry, maintain, and sell, your true financial gain is not simply $200,000.

You have to look at the entire financial picture.

A business owner understands this.

If my company sells $1 million worth of products, I cannot walk around saying, “I made $1 million.”

What were my expenses?

What did the products cost?

What did I pay employees?

What did I pay in rent?

What did I pay in insurance?

What did I pay in taxes?

Revenue is not profit.

Increased home value is not automatically profit.

Why don't we analyze our homes with the same financial discipline?

AND THEN YOU DECIDE TO SELL

Now comes one of my favorite parts of the homeownership financial adventure.

You decide to sell.

Suddenly, a parade of people may have their hands out.

Depending on how the sale is structured, you may face real estate agent commissions, closing costs, concessions, repairs, staging expenses, cleaning expenses, photography expenses, moving costs, and other transaction-related expenses.

The traditional 6 percent real estate commission model has long been one of my greatest frustrations.

Six percent?

Think about that.

On a $500,000 home, 6 percent is $30,000.

On a $750,000 home, 6 percent is $45,000.

On a $1 million home, 6 percent is $60,000.

Now, commissions are negotiable, compensation structures can vary, and sellers should carefully review exactly what they are agreeing to pay.

But I want to ask a simple question.

Why should the cost of selling necessarily rise so dramatically simply because the value of the house rises?

Does selling a $1 million house automatically require twice the labor of selling a $500,000 house?

Sometimes a higher-priced property may require specialized marketing, additional expertise, and a more complex sales strategy.

I understand that.

Good real estate professionals provide genuine value.

They understand contracts.

They coordinate transactions.

They negotiate.

They market property.

They manage deadlines.

They deal with buyers, sellers, inspectors, appraisers, lenders, and mountains of details.

I am not saying real estate professionals should work for free.

I am saying consumers should question the numbers.

If you have spent twenty years building equity, why should you casually surrender tens of thousands of dollars without scrutinizing the fee structure?

That is your equity.

That is your money.

That is your asset.

A $60,000 transaction cost can represent years of savings for the average American family.

Do not just shrug your shoulders and say, “That is what real estate agents charge.”

Ask questions.

Negotiate.

Compare services.

Understand exactly what you are paying and exactly what you are receiving.

Because after twenty years of feeding the house, the last thing you should do is blindly hand away a significant portion of your equity simply because no one told you to question the bill.

RENTING IS NOT FREE, BUT NEITHER IS OWNING

Now we need to be fair to the other side.

Renting costs money.

A renter may pay $2,000, $3,000, or $4,000 a month and build no direct equity in the property.

Rent can increase.

A landlord may decide not to renew a lease.

A renter may have restrictions.

You may not be able to renovate the property.

You may not have the same sense of permanence.

You are living in someone else's asset.

These are legitimate disadvantages.

But the renter also has advantages.

The roof is generally not the renter's financial responsibility.

The property's tax bill is not directly written by the renter.

The building's insurance is not the renter's policy, although renters should generally carry renters insurance for their own belongings and liability needs.

The air conditioning system may be the landlord's responsibility.

The water heater may be the landlord's responsibility.

Major plumbing repairs may be the landlord's responsibility.

The renter may have flexibility.

A job opportunity appears in another state?

Move.

The neighborhood changes?

Move.

The family grows?

Rent something larger.

The children leave home?

Rent something smaller.

You are not required to sell a major asset before changing your life.

That flexibility has value.

We talk constantly about the equity a homeowner builds.

We rarely talk about the freedom a renter may retain.

Freedom has value too.

THE TWENTY YEAR QUESTION

I want you to imagine two people.

One buys a home.

The other rents.

The homeowner says, “In twenty years, I will have equity.”

The renter says, “In twenty years, I will have investments.”

Who wins?

The answer is not automatically the homeowner.

It depends.

How quickly did the home appreciate?

What interest rate did the homeowner pay?

How much was the down payment?

How much did property taxes increase?

How much did insurance cost?

How many major repairs occurred?

How much was spent renovating?

What were the selling costs?

What did comparable rent cost?

Did the renter invest the financial difference?

What return did those investments earn?

How long did each person remain in the same property?

These questions matter.

If our hypothetical homeowner experiences $852,000 in gross cash outflow over twenty years using our simplified assumptions, we have to compare that with the value of the property and the equity accumulated at the end of the period.

Maybe the homeowner comes out far ahead.

Maybe the homeowner does not.

The answer cannot be found in a slogan.

“Renting is throwing money away” is a slogan.

“Real estate always goes up” is a slogan.

“Your home is your greatest investment” is a slogan.

Financial decisions should not be made with slogans.

They should be made with numbers.

YOUR HOME MAY BE A LUXURY, AND THAT IS OKAY

Perhaps we need to stop pretending that every home purchase must be justified as a brilliant investment.

Maybe you want a home because you love owning a home.

Wonderful.

Maybe you want a backyard.

Maybe you want a pool.

Maybe you want a garden.

Maybe you want to paint every room bright purple.

Maybe you want five dogs.

Maybe you want your grandchildren to visit the same house for twenty years.

Maybe you want stability.

Maybe you want memories.

Maybe you want to sit on your porch every evening and know that this is your place.

There is value in that.

Enormous value.

But emotional value and investment return are not the same thing.

A luxury automobile may bring someone tremendous happiness.

A boat may create unforgettable family memories.

A vacation home may become the gathering place for generations.

Not every purchase has to generate a financial return.

The problem begins when we convince ourselves that an expensive lifestyle decision is automatically an exceptional investment.

Your home may be one of the greatest joys of your life.

It may also be incredibly expensive.

Both things can be true.

Conclusion

So, is homeownership really worth it?

Maybe.

That may not be the answer the real estate industry wants you to hear.

It may not be the answer your parents taught you.

It may not be the answer your friends expect.

But it is the answer that requires you to think.

Maybe.

For some people, buying a home will be one of the greatest financial decisions they ever make.

They will buy in the right location.

They will purchase at the right price.

They will secure favorable financing.

They will remain in the property for many years.

The home will appreciate.

They will maintain it wisely.

They will build substantial equity.

They will eventually sell it and walk away with significant wealth.

That happens.

But it does not happen simply because someone signs a mortgage.

For other people, the home becomes a financial vacuum.

They stretch to make the down payment.

They stretch to make the monthly payment.

Then the insurance increases.

The property taxes increase.

The homeowners association increases its fees.

The air conditioner breaks.

The roof needs replacing.

The pool needs work.

The plumbing develops a problem.

The kitchen looks old.

The bathroom looks old.

The flooring needs replacing.

The neighborhood changes.

Then they need to move.

They sell.

They pay transaction expenses.

And after all the money, all the stress, all the repairs, and all the years, they discover that their supposed incredible investment was not nearly as profitable as they imagined.

The mistake is not necessarily buying the house.

The mistake is buying the mythology without calculating the mathematics.

Using the simple hypothetical numbers in this article, we found $426,000 in gross cash outflow over ten years.

Over twenty years, $852,000.

Again, I am not claiming that $852,000 vanished.

Part of the mortgage payments may have created equity.

The home may have increased significantly in value.

Some improvements may have added to the property's marketability and value.

But $852,000 moved out of the homeowner's bank account under our assumptions.

That matters.

And remember, our simplified example did not include every possible ownership expense.

Now compare that with the purchase price of the house.

Compare it with the eventual selling price.

Compare it with the remaining mortgage balance.

Compare it with what you paid to sell.

Then compare the final result with what your down payment and additional invested savings might have become over the same twenty years.

That is a real comparison.

That is financial thinking.

The next time someone tells you, “You are throwing your money away on rent,” ask them a question.

How much did you spend owning your house last year?

Watch what happens.

Most people do not know.

They know their mortgage payment.

Maybe they know their property taxes.

But ask them how much they have spent over the past ten years on interest, insurance, taxes, repairs, maintenance, improvements, landscaping, pool service, pest control, appliances, and everything else associated with the property.

Most people have never calculated it.

Then ask them how much their home increased in value.

That number they probably know.

Isn't that interesting?

We remember the gain.

We forget the expenses.

We celebrate the appreciation.

We ignore the carrying costs.

We brag about the selling price.

We forget the thousands and thousands of dollars we fed into the property along the way.

This is not how we evaluate any other investment.

If you owned a business, you would calculate expenses.

If you owned stocks, you would calculate your cost basis.

If you owned an investment property, you would calculate income and expenses.

Why should your personal residence be exempt from honest mathematics?

Before you buy your next home, sit down.

Take out a piece of paper.

Or better yet, open a spreadsheet.

Calculate the down payment.

Calculate the mortgage payment.

Separate estimated principal from interest.

Estimate property taxes.

Estimate insurance.

Estimate maintenance.

Estimate major replacements.

Estimate homeowners association fees.

Estimate lawn and pool costs.

Estimate transaction costs.

Estimate how long you realistically expect to live there.

Then create a second column.

Rent.

Calculate the cost of renting a comparable property.

Estimate rent increases.

Then calculate what you could invest if renting requires less total cash.

Be honest.

Would you actually invest the difference?

If the answer is no, admit it.

If the answer is yes, calculate the possible long-term outcome using several reasonable investment return assumptions.

Do not manipulate the numbers to prove what you already want to believe.

Let the numbers speak.

You may discover that buying is clearly better.

Buy the house.

You may discover that renting is clearly better.

Rent.

You may discover that the financial difference is close and your emotional desire to own a home makes buying worthwhile.

Wonderful.

But make the decision consciously.

A home is not automatically an investment miracle.

A mortgage is not automatically a wealth building machine.

Rent is not automatically wasted money.

And homeownership is not automatically the American dream for every person at every stage of life.

Sometimes the smartest thing you can own is freedom.

Freedom from a roof replacement.

Freedom from a $15,000 air conditioning disaster.

Freedom from rising property taxes.

Freedom from expensive insurance.

Freedom from constant repairs.

Freedom to move.

Freedom to downsize.

Freedom to invest your capital elsewhere.

Freedom to change your life without first putting a sign in the front yard and hoping someone buys your house.

Think again before you buy.

Run the numbers.

Calculate ten years.

Calculate twenty years.

Calculate the value of your down payment.

Calculate the cost of maintaining the property.

Calculate the cost of selling it.

Calculate everything.

Then ask yourself one final question.

Is homeownership really worth it?

You may be surprised by the answer.

Bill Conley

America's Favorite Life Coach

THE GREAT AMERICAN HOMEOWNERSHIP MYTH: “Rent Is Throwing Money Away” May Be One of the Most Expensive Sales Pitches Americans Have Ever Believed


THE GREAT AMERICAN HOMEOWNERSHIP MYTH

“Rent Is Throwing Money Away” May Be One of the Most Expensive Sales Pitches Americans Have Ever Believed

Introduction

“Rent is throwing money away.”

How many times have you heard that?

Your parents may have told you.

Your grandparents may have told you.

Your friends have probably told you.

A mortgage lender may have told you.

A real estate agent may have told you.

The entire American real estate machine has repeated it so many times, for so many decades, that we have accepted it as financial gospel.

Rent is throwing money away.

Buy a house.

Build equity.

Own something.

Invest in your future.

Stop paying someone else's mortgage.

It sounds so logical.

It sounds so responsible.

It sounds so financially intelligent.

There is only one problem.

It may be one of the most incomplete financial arguments ever sold to the American public.

I want to challenge the great American homeownership myth.

Yes, I called it a myth.

Not because owning a home is always a bad decision.

It is not.

Not because real estate cannot create wealth.

It can.

Not because homes do not appreciate.

Many do.

The myth is the almost religious belief that buying a personal residence is automatically financially superior to renting.

The myth is that every renter is wasting money while every homeowner is building wealth.

The myth is that if you buy a house for $400,000 and someday sell it for $600,000, you made $200,000.

The myth is that your home is always your greatest investment.

The myth is that the words “I own my home” automatically mean you have made a brilliant financial decision.

Maybe you have.

Maybe you have not.

Show me the numbers.

All of the numbers.

Do not show me the purchase price and the selling price.

That is kindergarten mathematics.

Show me the down payment.

Show me the loan origination expenses.

Show me the closing costs.

Show me the mortgage interest.

Show me the property taxes.

Show me the homeowners insurance.

Show me the homeowners association fees.

Show me the roof.

Show me the air conditioning systems.

Show me the water heaters.

Show me the plumbing repairs.

Show me the electrical repairs.

Show me the appliances.

Show me the flooring.

Show me the painting.

Show me the landscaping.

Show me the irrigation repairs.

Show me the pool expenses.

Show me the lawn expenses.

Show me the pest control.

Show me the tree removal.

Show me the renovations.

Show me the upgrades you made because the house looked dated.

Show me the repairs you made because the buyer demanded them.

Show me the money you spent getting the property ready to sell.

Show me the cost of selling the house.

Then show me what your original down payment could potentially have earned somewhere else.

Now we can talk about your investment.

For some strange reason, Americans analyze almost every investment by examining income, expenses, costs, and returns.

We buy a stock and calculate our cost basis.

We own a business and calculate revenue against expenses.

We purchase a rental property and calculate rent, taxes, insurance, maintenance, vacancy, management, and financing costs.

But when we buy the house we live in, emotion takes over.

“I bought it for $400,000.”

“I sold it for $600,000.”

“I made $200,000.”

No.

You sold it for $200,000 more than you paid for it.

That is not necessarily the same thing as making $200,000.

If I open a restaurant, spend $800,000 operating it, and eventually sell the business for $200,000 more than my original purchase price, would you automatically say I made $200,000?

Of course not.

You would ask me what the business cost to operate.

Why do we refuse to ask the same question about our homes?

Perhaps because the answer might disturb us.

Perhaps because an entire industry depends on Americans continuing to believe that homeownership is the unquestionable path to financial success.

Think about how many people financially benefit when you buy a house.

The lender.

The mortgage broker.

The title company.

The insurance company.

The appraiser.

The inspector.

The real estate professionals.

The local government collecting property taxes.

The homeowners association, if there is one.

The contractor.

The roofer.

The plumber.

The electrician.

The air conditioning company.

The landscaper.

The pool company.

The pest control company.

The appliance company.

The flooring company.

The painter.

Then, when you sell, another group of people may collect money from the transaction.

Everyone seems to make money from your house.

The question is, after twenty years, did you?

I am asking you to question something you may have believed your entire life.

Maybe rent is not always throwing money away.

Maybe mortgage interest is money you never see again.

Maybe property taxes are money you never see again.

Maybe homeowners insurance premiums are money you never see again unless you have a covered loss.

Maybe lawn service is money you never see again.

Maybe pool service is money you never see again.

Maybe routine maintenance is money you never see again.

Maybe a large portion of the money spent owning a house does exactly what people accuse rent of doing.

It pays for something you use.

You rent shelter from a landlord.

A homeowner pays for financing, taxes, insurance, maintenance, and the privilege and responsibility of ownership.

Both lifestyles cost money.

The question is not whether renting costs money.

Of course it does.

The question is whether homeownership is automatically the financial winner we have been told it is.

I do not believe it is.

And before you sign a thirty-year mortgage, drain your savings for a down payment, and congratulate yourself for no longer “throwing money away,” you may want to take out a calculator.

The truth might cost less than the myth.

THE SIX WORD SALES PITCH THAT BUILT AN INDUSTRY

“Rent is throwing your money away.”

Six words.

Brilliant words.

Emotionally powerful words.

Financially persuasive words.

And dangerously incomplete words.

The statement works because no one wants to feel foolish.

If you are paying $2,500 a month in rent and someone tells you that you are throwing $30,000 a year away, you immediately feel financial pressure.

Thirty thousand dollars!

Gone!

Wasted!

You begin imagining that if you owned a home, the entire $30,000 would somehow move from your checking account into a magical vault labeled EQUITY.

That is not how a mortgage works.

Suppose you have a mortgage payment of $2,000 a month.

That is $24,000 a year.

Over ten years, $240,000 flows from your household toward mortgage payments.

Over twenty years, $480,000.

Part of that money may reduce principal.

That portion builds equity.

But another portion pays interest.

Interest does not build equity.

Interest is the cost of borrowing money.

The lender gave you access to capital.

You paid for that access.

That is not fundamentally different from paying for any other service.

Yet we talk about rent as though it vanishes while every mortgage dollar becomes wealth.

It does not.

Open an amortization schedule.

Look at the early years of a traditional long-term mortgage.

Look at how the payment is divided between principal and interest.

You may be surprised by how slowly the principal balance initially declines.

This is not a conspiracy.

It is mathematics.

But it is mathematics that many homebuyers never seriously study before signing thirty years of their financial lives to a loan.

Thirty years.

Think about that.

We have normalized borrowing money for three decades to purchase a place to live and then convinced ourselves that the person who rents is financially irresponsible.

Maybe we need to rethink the conversation.

YOUR HOUSE HAS AN APPETITE

The day you buy your home, the spending does not stop.

It begins.

A house is hungry.

A new house may nibble.

An older house may devour.

Either way, eventually something needs money.

The air conditioner stops cooling.

The water heater leaks.

The refrigerator dies.

The dishwasher stops washing.

The washing machine shakes itself across the laundry room.

The dryer stops heating.

The garage door refuses to open.

The toilet runs.

The faucet drips.

The pipe leaks.

The irrigation system breaks.

The fence leans.

The driveway cracks.

The roof ages.

The windows deteriorate.

The exterior needs painting.

The interior needs painting.

The flooring wears out.

The kitchen becomes dated.

The bathroom looks twenty years old because it is twenty years old.

Then comes one of the most fascinating phrases in homeownership.

“We need to update the house.”

Why?

Sometimes because something is broken.

But sometimes because fashion changed.

The cabinets are the wrong color.

The countertops are outdated.

The flooring is no longer popular.

The bathroom tile looks old.

The light fixtures are dated.

Perfectly functional items are removed and replaced because the market has decided they no longer look modern.

Then, twenty years later, someone says, “I made $200,000 on my house.”

Did you subtract the $60,000 kitchen?

The $25,000 bathroom?

The $18,000 roof?

The air conditioning systems?

The flooring?

The appliances?

The painting?

The landscaping?

“No, Bill. Those were improvements.”

Fine.

Then include them in your cost basis when you mentally calculate your financial success.

You cannot ignore the money going in and celebrate only the money coming out.

That is not investing.

That is selective accounting.

LET US DO THE TWENTY YEAR MATH

Let us create a simplified hypothetical homeowner.

Mortgage payments are $2,000 a month.

That equals $24,000 a year.

Over twenty years, that is $480,000 in gross mortgage payments.

Again, part may reduce principal and build equity. We are calculating cash flow, not claiming the entire amount is lost.

Now add lawn service at $150 a month.

$1,800 a year.

Add pool service at $150 a month.

Another $1,800 a year.

Combined, $3,600 annually.

Over twenty years, $72,000.

Now estimate an average of $10,000 annually for repairs, maintenance, replacement, and improvements on an aging family home.

Some years will be dramatically lower.

Some years will be dramatically higher.

Over twenty years, our hypothetical estimate totals $200,000.

Now add $5,000 annually in property taxes.

Over twenty years, $100,000.

Mortgage cash outflow: $480,000.

Lawn and pool: $72,000.

Maintenance, repairs, replacements, and improvements: $200,000.

Property taxes: $100,000.

Total gross cash outflow?

$852,000.

Eight hundred fifty-two thousand dollars.

And we have not included homeowners insurance.

We have not included homeowners association fees.

We have not included every closing cost.

We have not included pest control.

We have not included every unexpected disaster.

We have not included the opportunity cost of the down payment.

We have not included selling expenses.

Now imagine that the house originally cost $400,000.

Does it disturb you even slightly that our simplified hypothetical homeowner could experience $852,000 in gross cash outflow over twenty years associated with the property?

Once again, cash outflow is not the same as financial loss.

The homeowner has been living in the property.

Shelter has value.

Principal may have been reduced.

Equity may have accumulated.

The property may have appreciated.

But the number forces us to confront something.

Homeownership is expensive.

Very expensive.

The purchase price is only the admission ticket.

THE $80,000 DOWN PAYMENT QUESTION

Our hypothetical $400,000 homebuyer puts 20 percent down.

That is $80,000.

The real estate world celebrates.

“You already have $80,000 in equity!”

Wonderful.

But financial analysis requires another question.

What else could the $80,000 have done?

This is opportunity cost.

Suppose the $80,000 were invested and hypothetically averaged 7 percent annually for twenty years.

Without additional contributions, it could theoretically grow to approximately $309,000.

No, a 7 percent return is not guaranteed.

Investments fluctuate.

Markets decline.

Taxes matter.

Fees matter.

Risk matters.

But opportunity cost is real.

When money goes into one asset, it cannot simultaneously be invested in another asset.

The down payment is not free simply because it becomes equity.

Capital has choices.

Now consider the homeowner who spends thousands of dollars annually on property taxes, major repairs, lawn care, pool maintenance, and improvements.

What if a renter had lower total housing costs and invested the difference?

Not spent it.

Invested it.

Month after month.

Year after year.

For twenty years.

Could the renter build wealth?

Of course.

This is where the homeownership sales pitch becomes intellectually dishonest when presented as an absolute.

A disciplined renter can build wealth.

An undisciplined homeowner can remain financially stressed.

The building does not determine financial intelligence.

Behavior does.

“YOU ARE PAYING YOUR LANDLORD'S MORTGAGE”

Here is another favorite.

“If you rent, you are paying your landlord's mortgage.”

Maybe.

You are also paying for housing.

When you stay at a hotel, are you paying the hotel's mortgage?

Possibly, indirectly.

When you eat at a restaurant, are you paying the restaurant owner's lease?

Possibly.

When you buy groceries, are you helping pay for the grocery store's building?

Yes, somewhere in the economics of the business.

When you purchase almost any service, part of your payment supports the operating expenses and potential profit of the provider.

That is commerce.

The landlord provides an asset.

The tenant pays to use the asset.

The tenant receives housing without assuming every direct financial responsibility associated with owning the property.

Why is that automatically foolish?

If the roof needs replacing, the renter generally does not receive a $25,000 roofing invoice.

If the central air conditioning system fails, the renter may not be writing the replacement check.

If property taxes rise, the landlord receives the tax bill directly.

Yes, the landlord may eventually increase the rent to reflect higher costs.

Of course.

But the tenant may also have a choice.

Move.

That word has financial value.

Move.

A homeowner who wants to relocate must deal with the property.

Prepare it.

List it.

Market it.

Negotiate.

Inspect it.

Possibly repair it.

Close the transaction.

A renter reaches the appropriate point in the lease, gives required notice, packs, and leaves.

That flexibility is not worthless.

It is an asset of a different kind.

THE REAL ESTATE COMMISSION QUESTION

Then comes the day you sell.

You have spent ten, fifteen, or twenty years building equity.

Your home has appreciated.

You are excited.

Then you begin calculating transaction costs.

For decades, consumers commonly associated residential real estate transactions with total commissions around 5 or 6 percent, although commission structures are negotiable and can vary.

Let us simply examine the mathematics of 6 percent.

A $500,000 sale produces $30,000.

A $750,000 sale produces $45,000.

A $1 million sale produces $60,000.

Sixty thousand dollars?

I understand that real estate professionals provide a service.

Good ones work hard.

They market.

They negotiate.

They coordinate.

They solve problems.

They understand contracts and deadlines.

They deal with emotional buyers and emotional sellers.

They may help rescue transactions that appear ready to collapse.

Excellent professionals deserve to be paid.

But consumers have every right to ask whether a percentage-based compensation model always makes financial sense.

Does selling a $1 million home automatically require twice as much work as selling a $500,000 home?

If the answer is no, why might the compensation double under a fixed percentage model?

Why should someone who has spent twenty years accumulating equity casually surrender tens of thousands of dollars without negotiating?

This is not an attack on real estate professionals.

It is an attack on financial complacency.

Ask what you are paying.

Ask who receives it.

Ask what services are included.

Ask what is negotiable.

Compare alternatives.

Do not allow anyone to shame you for protecting your equity.

You spent years building it.

YOUR HOME MAY NOT BE AN INVESTMENT

Here is where I may upset people.

Your primary residence may not truly function like an investment.

It may be a lifestyle asset.

There is a difference.

An investment is generally purchased with the expectation of generating income or appreciating in value.

Your home may appreciate.

But while you live in it, it usually consumes cash.

It does not send you a dividend check.

It does not deposit rent into your bank account.

It does not pay its own property taxes.

It does not replace its own roof.

It does not pay its own insurance.

You pay.

Month after month.

Year after year.

That does not make the home bad.

A home can provide extraordinary value.

Security.

Privacy.

Stability.

Community.

Memories.

Freedom to personalize your environment.

A place for children to grow.

A place for grandchildren to visit.

A backyard.

A pool.

A garden.

A workshop.

A sanctuary.

These things matter.

But perhaps we should stop requiring our homes to be financial superheroes.

Maybe the house is worth owning because you love living there.

That is enough.

You do not need to pretend it was the greatest investment in human history.

RENTING CAN BUY SOMETHING HOMEOWNERS FORGET

Freedom.

Renting can buy freedom.

Not always.

But sometimes.

Freedom to relocate.

Freedom to accept a new job.

Freedom to move closer to family.

Freedom to downsize.

Freedom to change neighborhoods.

Freedom to escape increasing insurance costs.

Freedom from major repair bills.

Freedom from worrying about the roof during every storm.

Freedom from wondering whether the air conditioner will survive another summer.

Freedom from spending Saturday repairing something you did not know existed until it broke.

We measure home equity in dollars.

How do we measure flexibility?

How do we measure time?

How do we measure reduced responsibility?

How do we measure the ability to change our lives quickly?

These have value.

The problem is that they do not appear on a real estate closing statement.

THE GREAT MYTH IS NOT HOMEOWNERSHIP

The great myth is not that owning a home can be wonderful.

It can be.

The great myth is certainty.

The certainty that buying is always smarter.

The certainty that renting is always wasteful.

The certainty that a house always builds wealth.

The certainty that appreciation equals profit.

The certainty that everyone should own.

Life is not that simple.

Finance is not that simple.

A 30-year-old married couple with three children may have completely different housing needs than a 68-year-old couple whose children are grown.

A person expecting to remain in a community for twenty years may make a different decision than someone whose career requires relocation.

A disciplined investor may use renting strategically.

Another person may need the forced savings mechanism of a mortgage.

One person wants stability.

Another wants mobility.

One person loves maintaining a home.

Another despises it.

Why have we decided there is only one correct answer?

Because we were sold a dream.

And dreams are powerful sales tools.

Conclusion

“Rent is throwing money away.”

The next time someone says that to you, smile.

Then ask them to show you their numbers.

Not their Zestimate.

Not the estimated market value of their house.

Not the price their neighbor received six months ago.

Their numbers.

How much did you put down?

How much have you paid in mortgage interest?

How much have you paid in property taxes?

How much have you paid in homeowners insurance?

How much have you spent on repairs?

How much have you spent on maintenance?

How much have you spent on appliances?

How much have you spent on your roof?

How much have you spent on air conditioning?

How much have you spent on landscaping?

How much have you spent on your pool?

How much have you spent on homeowners association fees?

How much have you spent renovating?

How much did it cost you to purchase the property?

How much will it cost you to sell it?

Then ask one more question.

What could your down payment and additional ownership expenses potentially have earned if invested elsewhere?

Now we are having an adult financial conversation.

I am not anti-homeownership.

I am anti-myth.

I am anti-slogan.

I am anti blindly following financial advice simply because our parents followed it and their parents followed it.

The world changes.

Housing markets change.

Interest rates change.

Insurance costs change.

Property taxes change.

Investment opportunities change.

Our lives change.

Why shouldn't our thinking change?

The hypothetical numbers we examined are impossible to ignore.

A $2,000 monthly mortgage creates $480,000 in gross mortgage cash outflow over twenty years.

Lawn and pool service at a combined $300 a month creates another $72,000.

An average hypothetical $10,000 annually in maintenance, repairs, replacements, and improvements creates $200,000.

Property taxes at $5,000 annually create another $100,000.

Gross cash outflow under those assumptions?

$852,000.

Eight hundred fifty-two thousand dollars.

And still we hear:

“Rent is throwing money away.”

Maybe we should be more careful with that statement.

The renter is purchasing housing.

The homeowner is purchasing housing while simultaneously financing, maintaining, insuring, taxing, and carrying an asset.

The homeowner may build tremendous equity.

The renter may build tremendous investments.

The homeowner may end twenty years wealthy.

The renter may end twenty years wealthy.

The homeowner may make poor financial decisions.

The renter may make poor financial decisions.

The house is not the magic.

Financial discipline is.

If you rent and spend every dollar you save, you may have nothing to show for twenty years of renting.

That is true.

But if you rent and systematically invest thousands of dollars annually, the story changes.

If you own a home and constantly borrow against your equity, refinance, overspend on renovations, and carry excessive debt, homeownership may not create the wealth you imagined.

Behavior matters.

Discipline matters.

Mathematics matters.

This is why I want people to stop asking, “Should I buy or rent?”

That question is incomplete.

Ask this instead:

What housing strategy gives me the best combination of financial security, lifestyle satisfaction, flexibility, and long-term wealth potential based on my specific life?

That is a better question.

Maybe the answer is a beautiful four-bedroom home with a pool.

Buy it.

Maybe the answer is a small condominium.

Buy it.

Maybe the answer is renting a luxury apartment and investing aggressively.

Rent it.

Maybe the answer is selling the enormous family home after the children leave and dramatically reducing your housing responsibilities.

Do it.

Your life is not a real estate advertisement.

You do not receive a trophy for having the largest mortgage.

You do not receive a medal because you own a roof.

You are not financially inferior because you rent.

And you are not automatically wealthy because you own.

The goal should not be homeownership.

The goal should be financial freedom.

Read that again.

The goal should not be homeownership.

The goal should be financial freedom.

If a home helps you achieve that freedom, wonderful.

If renting helps you achieve that freedom, wonderful.

If downsizing helps you achieve that freedom, wonderful.

Stop living according to six words someone taught you decades ago.

“Rent is throwing your money away.”

Maybe.

Or maybe buying the wrong home, at the wrong price, with the wrong financing, carrying enormous expenses for twenty years, and paying tens of thousands of dollars to eventually sell it can throw away far more.

There is no universal answer.

There is only your answer.

But before you buy a house, I want you to do something.

Take out a calculator.

Calculate ten years.

Calculate twenty years.

Calculate thirty years.

Calculate your down payment.

Calculate your interest.

Calculate your taxes.

Calculate your insurance.

Calculate your maintenance.

Calculate realistic repairs.

Calculate your selling expenses.

Calculate opportunity cost.

Then calculate the potential appreciation of the property.

Put everything on the table.

Do not hide the ugly numbers.

Do not exaggerate the beautiful numbers.

Do not allow a lender, a real estate professional, a family member, a friend, or a six word slogan to make one of the largest financial decisions of your life for you.

Maybe you should buy.

Maybe you should rent.

But whatever you do, know why you are doing it.

The great American homeownership myth survives because too few people question it.

I am questioning it.

Maybe you should too.

Bill Conley

America's Favorite Life Coach