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Rent vs Buy Calculator

Total cost comparison of renting versus buying over your chosen timeframe including opportunity cost. Free real estate calculator for rent vs buy. AU stamp duty a...

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Clients have been renting for five years and are wondering if they should have bought. Or they're about to sign a lease and wondering if buying makes more sense. You need the 5-year comparison before the conversation goes in circles.

Rent vs Buy Calculator
Analysis
AU long-run average ~5–7%
If you invested the deposit instead
Buying costs: Mortgage repayments, council rates (~0.3%), maintenance (~1% p.a.), insurance, strata (if applicable), minus equity gained
Renting costs: Rent paid over 5 years, renters insurance
Opportunity cost: Return you could have earned investing your deposit instead
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Compares the true cost of buying vs renting over a 5-year period. Buying costs include mortgage repayments, rates, insurance, maintenance and acquisition costs, offset by capital growth. Renting costs include rent plus the opportunity cost of the deposit invested elsewhere.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Buy cost (5yr) = Total mortgage repayments + Rates and insurance + Maintenance - Capital gain Rent cost (5yr) = Annual rent x 5 + Deposit opportunity cost Deposit opportunity cost = Deposit x [(1 + invest rate)^5 - 1] Property value year 5 = Price x (1 + growth rate)^5

The rent vs buy decision requires comparing like-with-like over the same time horizon. The buy side includes the total mortgage outflow minus capital gain accrued. The rent side includes total rent paid plus the opportunity cost of the deposit -- what the deposit would have grown to if invested in the sharemarket instead. The critical inputs are property growth rate and investment return rate -- small changes in these assumptions drive large differences in the outcome.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Suburban family home -- steady market
Given: Purchase price: $750,000 | Deposit: $150,000 | Rate: 6.5% | Weekly rent: $550 | Property growth: 5%/yr | Investment return: 7%/yr
Working: Loan: $600,000 | Monthly repayment at 6.5%: $3,792 | 5yr mortgage total: $227,520 | Rates/insurance/maintenance est: $7,500/yr x 5 = $37,500 | Property value yr 5: $750K x 1.05^5 = $957,211 | Capital gain: $207,211 | Buy net cost: $227,520 + $37,500 - $207,211 = $57,809 | Rent total: $550 x 52 x 5 = $143,000 | Deposit opportunity cost: $150K x (1.07^5-1) = $61,038 | Rent total net: $204,038
Answer: Buying saves $146,229 over 5 years at 5% growth and 7% investment return
💡 Property growth and investment return assumptions drive the result. At 3% property growth vs 9% investment return, renting may win on this calculation.
Standard
Inner-city apartment -- slow capital growth
Given: Purchase price: $650,000 | Deposit: $130,000 | Rate: 6.5% | Weekly rent: $480 | Property growth: 3%/yr | Investment return: 8%/yr
Working: Buy net cost including lower capital gain: approximately $118,000 | Rent total: $480 x 52 x 5 = $124,800 | Opportunity cost: $130K x (1.08^5-1) = $61,065 | Rent net: $185,865
Answer: Buying saves ~$68,000 over 5 years even at slower growth
💡 At 3% growth the buy advantage narrows significantly. If the property grows at only 2%, renting is likely better on pure financial terms for a 5-year horizon.
Advanced
How growth rate assumptions change the answer
Given: Same property: $750,000 | Deposit: $150,000 | Rate: 6.5% | Rent: $550/wk | Scenario A: growth 7%, invest 6% | Scenario B: growth 3%, invest 9%
Working: Scenario A buy advantage: property growth dominates -- buying wins comfortably | Scenario B: high investment return + low property growth -- renting may be equal or better
Answer: Scenario A: buying clearly better | Scenario B: renting roughly equivalent or slightly better
💡 The rent vs buy calculator is only as good as its growth assumptions. Use it to understand which assumptions you are implicitly making rather than treating the result as a forecast.

4 Sanity check

Long-run Australian property growth
Major capitals: 6-8%/yr over 30 years | Regional and outer suburban: 3-6%/yr
Past performance does not guarantee future returns -- 5-year periods show much higher variance than long-run averages.
ASX sharemarket long-run return
Approximately 9-10%/yr before tax including dividends | After-tax 7-8%/yr for most investors
Transaction costs excluded from this calculator
Stamp duty: $20,000-$55,000+ | Conveyancing: $1,500-$3,000 | Agent commission on sale: 2-2.5% of sale price
Add stamp duty to buying costs for a complete comparison.
Emotional and lifestyle factors
Job security, school catchments, renovation plans, desire to own -- not captured in any calculator
The decision to buy is rarely purely financial.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using a short time horizon Comparing rent vs buy over 1-2 years Transaction costs dominate -- buying almost always looks worse on short horizons The rent vs buy comparison needs at least 5 years to be meaningful. Stamp duty alone takes 3-4 years to recover through capital growth.
Not including opportunity cost of the deposit Treating the deposit as money that 'just sits there' Renting looks more expensive than it really is -- because the opportunity cost of the deposit is ignored The deposit could be invested. Its growth over the comparison period is the opportunity cost of buying. Include it in the analysis.
Using optimistic growth assumptions without sensitivity testing Applying the long-run average growth to a short-term scenario Buy advantage appears large when it may be marginal or negative Run the comparison at pessimistic (3%), base (5%) and optimistic (7%) growth rates. The range of outcomes is more informative than a single forecast.
Treating the mortgage principal repayment as a pure cost Focusing on the repayment amount without separating principal from interest Buying appears more expensive -- but part of each repayment is building equity The calculator nets capital growth against mortgage costs. Principal repayment is not a cost -- it is equity accumulation. Only interest is a true cost.