Summary
The rent vs buy decision in India depends on the price-to-rent ratio, home loan interest rate, expected property appreciation, and the opportunity cost of the down payment. In many Indian metros, high property prices relative to rents (price-to-rent ratios of 25-40x) mean renting and investing the difference can be financially superior to buying, even before accounting for maintenance and transaction costs.
How it works
The comparison framework
The calculator compares two scenarios over a chosen period:
Buying: Down payment + EMI + maintenance + property tax + insurance - tax benefits + property appreciation Renting: Rent payments + investment returns on the down payment and EMI-rent difference
Key Indian factors
- Price-to-rent ratio: In metros like Mumbai and Bangalore, this can be 30-40x annual rent. A flat renting for Rs 30,000/month might cost Rs 1.2-1.5 crore to buy.
- Property appreciation: Varies hugely by location. National average is 5-8% in top cities, but can be flat or negative in oversupplied markets.
- Home loan rates: 8-9.5% (floating) for most borrowers.
- Rental yield: Typically 2-3% of property value in major cities (very low by global standards).
Break-even analysis
The calculator finds the number of years at which buying becomes cheaper than renting. If the break-even is 15+ years and you might move sooner, renting is likely better.
Worked example
Property: Rs 80 lakh, Rent for same property: Rs 20,000/month, Loan: 80%, Rate: 8.5%, 20 years
Buying (Year 1):
- Down payment: Rs 16 lakh
- Monthly EMI: Rs 55,100
- Annual maintenance + taxes: Rs 60,000
- Section 24 tax benefit (30% bracket): Rs 60,000
- Net annual cost: Rs 6,01,200
Renting (Year 1):
- Annual rent: Rs 2,40,000
- Returns on Rs 16 lakh at 10%: Rs 1,60,000
- Invest EMI-rent difference (Rs 35,100/month at 10%): Rs 4,42,000
- Net annual cost: Rs 2,40,000 (rent) - Rs 6,02,000 (investment returns) = net gain Rs 3,62,000
At 6% property appreciation, buying breaks even around year 12-15.
Inputs explained
- Property price — purchase cost of the home
- Monthly rent — current rent for a similar property
- Down payment — amount paid upfront (typically 20%)
- Loan rate — home loan interest rate
- Property appreciation — expected annual increase in property value
- Investment return — expected return on invested savings (if renting)
- Rent escalation — annual rent increase (typically 5-10%)
Outputs explained
- Net wealth under each scenario — total financial position after N years
- Break-even year — when buying becomes cheaper
- Monthly cost comparison — what you pay each month under each scenario
- Sensitivity analysis — how the answer changes with different appreciation/return assumptions
Assumptions & limitations
- Does not model stamp duty and registration charges (5-8% of property value in most states) which add significantly to buying costs.
- Rental yield in India is very low (2-3%), making buying for investment unattractive purely on cash flow.
- Property appreciation varies dramatically by micro-market. A specific locality may appreciate or depreciate independent of city-level trends.
- Does not account for the emotional and lifestyle benefits of home ownership.
- Locked-in costs of buying (EMI, maintenance) are less flexible than renting if your income changes.
Sources
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