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In Boston, the math is simple – buying beats renting by a wide margin

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The “buying versus renting” debate is one of the quintessential rumbles in American business circles, but a new Trulia study has made it clear – here in Greater Boston, buying beats renting by a wide margin.

For its analysis, Trulia compared the median home price in Greater Boston to the median rent, and when it broke down the relative monthly costs, it found that owning is 37.6 percent cheaper than renting. Even more, for renting to become more affordable than buying, one of two things would have to occur: either Greater Boston’s median price will have to jump by 65 percent, or mortgage rates will have to rise 137.7 percent.

Of course, Trulia’s research did make several assumptions, including: that buyers make a down payment of 20 percent on a 30-year mortgage; that they secure a 3.66 percent interest rate; that they itemize their tax deductions at the 25 percent bracket; that they stay in the home for seven years; and most notably, that they have the financial means to purchase a home in the first place, which is not the case for a shockingly large number of American households.

But if consumers are able to check off all those boxes, homeownership is far more financially advantageous than renting, and Trulia’s analysis certainly bears that out. See our chart below to see how Greater Boston compares with other metro areas:

Metro Area Median Home Price Median Rent Cheaper to Buy than Rent
Atlanta $172,119 $1,350 -45.0%
Boston $411,228 $2,400 -37.6%
Chicago $216,875 $1,750 -36.9%
Dallas $215,053 $1,650 -47.4%
Houston $176,513 $1,575 -52.9%
Los Angeles $536,351 $2,600 -32.7%
Miami $259,527 $2,000 -53.2%
New York $408,774 $2,350 -32.9%
Philadelphia $141,176 $1,300 -50.8%
Phoenix $224,528 $1,350 -38.5%
San Francisco $1,094,742 $4,300 -25.9%
Seattle $452,755 $2,300 -31.7%

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