Ok, one point at a time:
- Tax deductions- Homeowners can deduct a large percentage of the taxes they pay on their primary residence. You can't deduct rent. And renters DO pay taxes (to their landlord, who pays the government). (EDIT: THIS IS AN ERROR. IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN A REFERENCE TO INTEREST PAYMENTS, NOT TAXES)
You need to have a lot of deductions to reach this point with the current tax code. The standard deduction is $24k so you would have to have one hell of a mortgage or a lot of other deductions to meet that mark. First time home buyers are rarely going to be able to take advantage of this. FWIW, I have never been able to deduct enough to get over the standard deduction, even before the change.
-Rent does not equal mortgage payment. Rents almost always exceed mortgage payments.
Yes. Of course they do.
- Mortgages don't have brokerage fees
I'm not sure what the point is here.
- We all need a place to live. Renters pay rent. Forever. They never stop paying rent. Owners pay mortgages. Eventually mortgages are paid off, and the house has a value. I don't understand where these "smart" people who are gonna invest instead of buying a house are gonna live.
This is covered in the calculations I did, the calculator I suggested, and the numbers I showed earlier in this thread.
An EXTREMELY SMALL percentage of people will make monthly investments diligently without exception. Almost zero. The alleged "earnings" is fake- if they don't make the deposits into their investment account every single month for 30 years, they will earn nothing.
There is some truth to this, but it is sad. Presumably if you are trying to build wealth, you have some auto-invest account in place. 401k, IRA, Roth, etc. If your living expenses, you dial up the invest to compensate. But this raises another point which is: be open about how to build wealth. My whole issue with this is how home ownership is perceived as a ticket to wealth, when in fact there are other ways that are just as effective and in some cases more effective. That message should be communicated as well. If we (society) want to give younger people the opportunity to build wealth, we should educate them on all of the options.
As mtn pointed out, one big math thing not taken into account here, is extra money that is invested can also be tax sheltered meaning its effectively worth more, via Roth, 401k, etc. or even double-tax sheltered via a HSA.
- After a few years, equity loans are available to owners which can free their capital if they choose. There is no such thing for renters.
This is actually an advantage for renters in this case. Renters don't need to remove equity from their residence, because they can invest that wealth how they choose and tap into as needed. With obvious limitations for 401k, HSA, IRA, etc.
- Rents are not static. They go up over time. Even in rent controlled spaces. Mortgages are static. They do not go up. Over time as an individual earns more money (raises, etc), a mortgage is a smaller percentage of the gross income. Rents just keep increasing to keep consuming the same (or more) percentage of gross income. If you lose a job or get a pay cut, the landlord will not lower your rent. He will find another tenant.
Agreed, and this is one reason a mortgage usually wins over the long long term. But you have to do the math.
Here are some other things to consider (that are not factored into any math I've shown)
- First time home buyers often buy way more than they need. Its easy to rent an 800-1000 sq ft 1-2br place. Its not easy to buy one.
- With more space comes more utilities, and more STUFF. The cost of furnishing the extra space in a home can be quite significant.
- Most home buyers do not seem to value their time. The average SFH requires a lot of time in general chores that an apt or other rental does.
- Owning a house opens the door to remodeling things, which comes at a great expense
There are many times when renting can be a financial win over buying. I shared an example, and I've given a link to calculators where you can test others. I'm not going to continue this particular discussion beyond this post. We are way off topic. The original point was just that Home Ownership is not a guaranteed ticket to wealth building and should not be advertised as such.