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Feb 272012
 

It seems popular opinion about home ownership is that you are creating an investment for the future.  Nothing could be further from the truth, so let’s explore.

I first ran across this concept about a decade or more ago while reading Rich Dad, Poor Dad.  It’s a great read, and I highly recommend it. Robert Kiyosaki writes about his experience with his rich dad and contrasts them against his poor dad.

The core to the book emphasizes that Americans have traditionally bought into a lie about wealth and money. While there are a number of points made in the book, the one I want to look at is the idea that a home is an investment. Most of these ideas below are my own, but burst to light by reading Kiyosaki’s book.

The main myth centers around the fact that housing always appreciates. Over the past two decades we’ve seen dramatic increases in real estate. But, we’ve also seen a dramatic fall.  While falls in housing prices have always occurred, it is rare to see it happen the way it has in the past five years.

So, let’s look at the historical appreciation rate. I tried putting my hands on charts I’ve seen before, and couldn’t find them, unfortunately.  But, I have never seen a chart say that homes appreciate significantly more than the rate of inflation. This means that over decades, homes appreciate only as fast, or slightly faster than the rate of inflation. The highest I’ve seen covering 50+ years of real estate is a 1% annual return.  Some show less than inflation, but most were right at the inflation rate. Most of the differences were in how the data was calculated.

This actually makes sense, since if housing continued to appreciate faster than inflation, and faster than wage growth, then eventually more and more people would be unable to afford a home as the cost to purchase that home becomes too expensive.  So, market pressures will pull housing costs back down as we have seen since 2006.

The second factor to point out is the cost of a mortgage. Not all homes are mortgaged. In fact around 40% are owned without any mortgage.  Those that are face a serious cost.  It can cost around $4,000 for a $100,000 home to close with a mortgage. Now, add in the cost of the interest.  Over a 30 year mortgage, you pay about 70% of the cost of the home in interest, plus the cost of the house. Again, with our $100,000 house, and a 4% interest rate, you’ll pay $71,868 in interest over 30 years, and additionally pay the $100,000 initial cost of the home.

Now, people say that the home is appreciating.  Well, inflation has been roughly 3-4% annually.  Factoring out the present value, the future value would be $242,726 in 30 years at 3%. That’s still a gain over the investment of $171,868.  I could go into more details on why that gain is relatively small, but let’s be brief before your eyes glaze over.

Third, let’s factor in expenses. It’s been said that expenses on an average house run about $2,000 a year. Not a lot of money, but not a free ride like on a rental. Without even factoring that the maintenance costs keep going up each year, over 30 years, that’s an additional cost of $60,000.  So, after your interest payments, you’ve earned $70,858 on your house value.  But, you’ve paid out $60,000 in house repairs and that leaves you with $10,858.  Now, let’s take out that $4,000 in closing costs and you have just $6,858.

But, wait, there’s more! Your home is now out-dated. In appraisal terms, it faces obsolescence. If all your neighbors upgraded to meet new green energy options like solar or geothermal, or they upgraded to 5 bedrooms which is the new norm (30 years from now), or any of a myriad different changes, then your home is obsolete. You must spend tens of thousands of dollars to upgrade it.

Again, for brevity, let’s not factor in all the problems that could creep up like neighborhood blight, rising costs of energy, facing more rentals in the neighborhood than home owners, and a rash of foreclosures that prevents you from selling.

Look, I’m not trying to scare you out of a home. In fact, it is one of the wisest decisions you’ll ever make. Home ownership is tied to being more successful, happier, and your children will love that you aren’t scared of the marker on the wall causing your rental security deposit to disappear.  You can paint how you want, renovate like you want, and in single-family housing, be as loud as you want (well, almost).  And, when you rent, you don’t get a dime when you leave to go toward your next place.

But, the truth is simply that it will cost you more to own a home than you think. Yes, at the end of that 30 year note, you can cash out a hefty amount. If, and only if, you haven’t been faced with obsolescence. But, the final point is that you still need a place to live. And that will still cost you money.  Buying without a mortgage is the best choice since you can get a better deal, have lower closing costs, and no threat of foreclosure.  But, you will still need to renovate and maintain the house.

My gut tells me that owning a house long term costs about the same as it would to rent, even with the low interest rates we see today.  I would love to see statistics proving that, but I’m no statistician and stats don’t sell houses like I do.  It is definitely true if you continually move and never pay the mortgage off.  So, assume that you are purchasing a house for the peace of mind of having your own place among other reasons, not because it’s a good investment.

For a great way to search for that home, check out my special search site.

  2 Responses to “Is Your Home Really an Investment? No!”

  1. I would pay the mortgage down early, wuothit relying on the renters covering the payment. That will protect you in the event that you can’t get renters for a while (economic downturn or some other issue you can’t control) or interest rates going sky high. You will get a far better return if you reduce your interest costs than you would if you invested the money. Here’s why.Say you borrow $ 100 000 at 6%, with repayments of $ 150 a week. Over 30 years, it will cost about $ 116 000 in interest. That’s on top of the payments, so adding the principle to that means you’ve spent $ 216 000 to pay off $ 100 000. I’ll just guess (you haven’t told us how much extra you’d be adding to the mortgage) that you pay double repayments, which would take repayments to $ 300 a week. That would clear the mortgage in a little over 9 years, and only cost about $ 130 800 to do so. That’s only $ 30 800 in interest. If you instead invested that extra $ 150 a week ($ 600 a month) at 4% interest for 30 years, you’d have over $ 416 000 on paper, but about a quarter of that at least would go in tax. That investment would reap income, but it would be taxable income. So you’d probably come out with an effective return of about 3%, which would be just ahead of inflation. So you’d be left with about $ 350 000, minus the $ 116 000 you’ve paid on interest, leaves you with a return, after 30 years, of $ 234 000. Taking into account inflation, the value of this after 30 years would be much less. It would probably only be worth about half of that, or $ 117 000. However, paying the homeloan out in 9 years frees you to put the entire amount (rental income and personal contribution) into an investment. That makes it $ 1200 a month over 20 years at $ 393 962 before inflation, or just under $ 200 000 in today’s dollars. That’s not including capital gains on the investment property.I’d pay the mortgage out early, to reduce your debt burden, and then consider buying another investment property. You’d be better off in the long run.Best wishes

    • That’s a good observation, and follows my point very well. In the US, the level of debt the country is taking on will mean higher taxes in the long run, particularly on capital gains. And capital gains are the taxes you’ll pay on the investment you mentioned.

      So, instead of just a quarter taken in taxes, I’m guessing it will be nearer to half.

      While I am partial to real estate as a real estate agent, I think investing in rental property is a great long term investment. You only realize the gain on the property’s value once you sell it. While you do pay taxes on rents that exceed your expenses, your taxes there are taxed as regular income, which could be as low as 10%. You can also write off expenses to reduce your tax liability.

      Each person is different, and should find their own investment vehicle that they’re comfortable with. If you want to concentrate on your career and not worry about investments, just picking good index funds would be the best bet.

      Any way you do it, just realize that your personal home is not an investment! :)

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