Homeowners are paying less, renters are paying more to live in Washington

by | Sep 12, 2016

As featured in The Washington Post

At the same time renting in the Washington area is becoming more expensive, homeownership is becoming cheaper. Low mortgage rates and moderating home prices have made owning a home more affordable. Rising rents have made leasing more costly.

A recent study by Apartment List found that the gap between what a renter pays and what a homeowner pays for housing in the D.C. region is growing wider by the year. The disparity between the two is among the greatest in the nation.

The San Francisco-based company, which runs an apartment listings search engine, analyzed Census Bureau data from 2007 to 2014, comparing median monthly payments of homeowners who have mortgages with median rents. Ownership costs included all costs associated with owning a home — mortgage payment, property taxes, insurance and maintenance.

The inflation-adjusted amount a homeowner pays monthly has fallen 13 percent nationally since 2007 while median rents have risen by 3.7 percent. In the Washington region, ownership costs have decreased 15.9 percent while rents have increased 12.5 percent. Homeowners are paying $415 a month less, while renters are paying $170 per month more than they were in 2007.

The study suggests that the disparity between renters and owners is exacerbating inequality in the United States. Anyone wealthy enough to own real estate benefits from lower mortgage rates and tax deductions while those who rent are hit with rising housing costs, which hampers their ability to save enough to buy a home. Minorities and younger Americans, many of whom are burdened by student debt, are especially at risk of being locked out of homeownership.

Despite the increased costs of renting, the number of people choosing to lease rather than buy is growing. The homeownership rate nationwide has dwindled since the Great Recession. It has sunk to 62.9 percent, its lowest level since 1965. In the D.C. area, homeownership has fallen from 69.2 percent in 2007 to 63.7 percent in 2016.

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