The "property ladder" narrative is deeply embedded in British culture. But is buying always better than renting? Let's look at the actual numbers.
The Costs of Buying (That People Forget)
When people compare rent to a mortgage payment, they're comparing apples to oranges. A homeowner also pays mortgage interest (the portion of your payment that isn't building equity), buildings insurance (£200-£500/year), maintenance and repairs (budget 1-2% of property value per year — that's £2,500-£5,000 on a £250,000 home), service charges (if leasehold), ground rent (if leasehold), and the opportunity cost of your deposit (£25,000 in an ISA at 7% = £1,750/year).
Real Comparison: £250,000 Property
| Cost | Buying (monthly) | Renting |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage/Rent | £1,200 | £1,000 |
| Insurance | £35 | £15 (contents) |
| Maintenance | £250 | £0 |
| Service charge | £100 | £0 |
| Opportunity cost of deposit | £145 | £0 |
| Total monthly cost | £1,730 | £1,015 |
When Buying Wins
Buying wins when you'll stay in the property for 5+ years (to overcome transaction costs), property prices rise faster than your invested deposit would grow, you value the security and control of ownership, and mortgage rates are low relative to rental yields. Historically in the UK, property ownership has been a strong long-term investment.
When Renting Wins
Renting wins when you might move within 3-5 years, the rent-to-buy ratio in your area is very favourable to renters (common in London), you'd need a very high-interest mortgage, or you want flexibility and zero maintenance responsibility.
The Honest Answer
For most people who plan to stay in one area long-term, buying is better — but primarily because of forced savings (mortgage payments build equity) and potential capital appreciation, not because it's cheaper month to month. Use our mortgage calculator to see your actual payments.
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