Irvine Allergy Dr_IHB
New member
I know IR has cited 160x rent as a "reasonable" multiplier to figure out the value of a property but am unclear on how he got to that number. I was curious as to what I would find reasonable so I'm going to go over a hypothetical scenario.
What is the "breakeven" point between renting and buying? In my opinion, it is when your mortgage interest + property tax + HOA + maintenance costs - tax savings = rent - reasonable investment returns on your saved downpayment. Any principal payments you make should not be included as it serves basically as an enforced savings plan. This calculation also depends on the buyers believing that the real estate market prices will be stable or will actually appreciate over the duration they will hold the property. In other words, if you feel that the market will depreciate for the next 3 years but then bottom out and return to your original price after another 5, you need to be able to hold the property for 8 years.
So, some assumptions. The buyers are a married couple making $150k/yr, have excellent credit, and are purchasing a $500k property with 20% down. They will be using a 30-yr fixed loan with a rate of 6.5% and paying no points. Their tax bracket, in terms of benefiting from mortgage interest deductions, is effectively 34.3% (25% federal + 9.3% CA). They are purchasing a new or fairly new property. The property has an effective property tax rate of 1.8% including Mello-Roos and a HOA of $150/month. I will assign monthly maintenance costs at $56 given its a new house. Buy an older home and trade higher maintenance costs with lower property taxes and HOA. I know you may take issue with these assumptions, but I'm making them just for the purpose of calculations.
Here is what the calculation turns out to be on a monthly basis: $2130 + $750 + $150 + $56 - $874 = $2212. Add in a safe investment return (after taxes) on $100k had they put it into CDs instead of using it as their downpayment of $288/month and you get a rental equivalent of $2500/mo. So, I get a reasonable rent multiplier of $500k/$2.5k = 200.
The 200 is a good baseline, I think, but a homeowner may be reasonably expected to pay a bit more, as homeownership conveys a few other advantages such as a hedge against housing inflation (in the few years I've rented, I've never seen rent go up less than 4% a year). And, if you're willing to wait several years, you may also benefit by catching periods of aggressive real estate appreciation.
What do you think?
What is the "breakeven" point between renting and buying? In my opinion, it is when your mortgage interest + property tax + HOA + maintenance costs - tax savings = rent - reasonable investment returns on your saved downpayment. Any principal payments you make should not be included as it serves basically as an enforced savings plan. This calculation also depends on the buyers believing that the real estate market prices will be stable or will actually appreciate over the duration they will hold the property. In other words, if you feel that the market will depreciate for the next 3 years but then bottom out and return to your original price after another 5, you need to be able to hold the property for 8 years.
So, some assumptions. The buyers are a married couple making $150k/yr, have excellent credit, and are purchasing a $500k property with 20% down. They will be using a 30-yr fixed loan with a rate of 6.5% and paying no points. Their tax bracket, in terms of benefiting from mortgage interest deductions, is effectively 34.3% (25% federal + 9.3% CA). They are purchasing a new or fairly new property. The property has an effective property tax rate of 1.8% including Mello-Roos and a HOA of $150/month. I will assign monthly maintenance costs at $56 given its a new house. Buy an older home and trade higher maintenance costs with lower property taxes and HOA. I know you may take issue with these assumptions, but I'm making them just for the purpose of calculations.
Here is what the calculation turns out to be on a monthly basis: $2130 + $750 + $150 + $56 - $874 = $2212. Add in a safe investment return (after taxes) on $100k had they put it into CDs instead of using it as their downpayment of $288/month and you get a rental equivalent of $2500/mo. So, I get a reasonable rent multiplier of $500k/$2.5k = 200.
The 200 is a good baseline, I think, but a homeowner may be reasonably expected to pay a bit more, as homeownership conveys a few other advantages such as a hedge against housing inflation (in the few years I've rented, I've never seen rent go up less than 4% a year). And, if you're willing to wait several years, you may also benefit by catching periods of aggressive real estate appreciation.
What do you think?