Comment by bs7280
2 days ago
This is a good point, and I was curious to see exact numbers on the invest vs be a landlord opportunity cost.
The rich person gets to rent the house, while the "newly weds" are living in it. And most importantly - the house itself will appreciate in value at a rate near 5%
Assuming they both buy a $500k house w/ a 20% down payment and a 5% loan. Realistically the young couple would get a worse rate but lets say they both get 5%. Monthly payment is $2,522.29 w/ taxes and insurance lets call it $3000 a month.
The newly weds are just eating that entire cost every month for 30 years, whereas the Rich landlord rents it out. After a quick and dirty Zillow search lets assume $3500 a month rent to start, so he's making $500 a month profit on an asset thats already increasing in value 5% ish per year.
So, with these assumptions: - Home cost increases 2% a year - Rental price increases 3% a year - Home value increases 5% a year
Total rental profit is $537k Final home value is $1.56 M Total Loan cost: $873k
Bringing the landlords return on 100k to be $1.224M in profit over 30 years (Final sell price - total loan cost + rental profit assuming they stuff it under a mattress). Whereas $100k at a 5% yearly return will be ~$430k
disclaimer: Im not the best with Excel and ive never actually bought property so im sure there are flaws in my math.
> And most importantly - the house itself will appreciate in value at a rate near 5%
or 0.7% ... or 20% ... or ... -2.3% ... or ...