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Alternative: you can spend that same 15-25 years paying roughly the same monthly amount in rent at various places, and have exactly zero equity or assets to show for it at the end of the period. Zero zilch nada, the money is burned and gone forever.
Frame it in that sense and it's a no brainer.
In the current market though either try to get a variable rate mortgage or be prepared to refinance it in a few years if/when interest rates cool down. the current rates suuuuuck.
In the UK, rent is substantially more than mortgage repayments.
Landlords will cry about their maintenance costs but I've never seen any maintenance that wasn't the cheapest fix possible by a cowboy family friend.
That's curious, both in Ireland and Spain mortgages are much lower than rent, it's literally stupid for you to rent if you have the money to make the down payment (which unfortunately I never did, but know many people who went from >€2000 rent to ~€1400 mortgages)
You've both said the same thing in different ways; not sure if you were surprised.
See kids? This is why you don't reply to comments before coffee
(:
You'll likely wind up paying significantly more in rent. When we bought our house in 2020, our mortgage was around $300 more than we were paying in rent. I think within 6 months or so, average rental prices for a similar home were significantly higher. By this point, even an apartment costs more to rent than our mortgage (PITI).
You always pay more for rent- because mortgage payments aren't just lost to the void, they become equity value that you can then get back out by selling later, less cost of interest. The "real" cost of your house payment in a net-value sense is only the interest, actually.