VOCE
    S
    LoginStart Creating

    About

    • Our Community
    • Pricing

    Resources

    • Find Experts
    • Browse Articles
    • Login

    Legal

    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Community Guidelines
    • Accessibility

    Support

    • Contact Us
    • San Ramon, CA

    © 2026 VOCE.COM. All rights reserved.

    0

    Discussion

    Loading comments...

    Q&A with the Author

    C
    Craig Messman

    @craigmessman

    President, Molitor Financial Group / Messman Lending Team

    As a seasoned professional in the mortgage industry, I am dedicated to ensuring that every client's financial journey is marked by success and security. My approach is characterized by a personalized touch, as I believe that no two clients are alike. I take the time to thoroughly assess each client's unique financial situation, tailoring mortgage solutions that are not only financially sound but also sustainable for the long term.

    1
    Articles
    0
    Followers
    Trending
    Why Renting Isn’t Always the Best Option, Especially for This Generation
    Real Estate

    Why Renting Isn’t Always the Best Option, Especially for This Generation

    #home-buying#mortgage-planning#mortgage-loans#first-time-buyer#mortgage-advice#home-loans#home-financing#single-family-rentals
    Chicago, IL
    A

    Author

    Local Professional

    July 7, 2026
    ·
    3 min read
    0 views

    The Messman Mortgage Playbook Logo

    Why Renting Isn’t Always the Best Option, Especially for This Generation

    You hear it everywhere right now. Renting is cheaper. Renting is flexible. Renting feels safer. That’s true in the short term. But what about the long term?

    If renting is the “smart move”, who do most wealthy people still own assets? That question matters because this decision isn’t about monthly payment. It’s about what your future looks like.

    The Real Problem Most People Don’t See

    Right now, renting often looks cheaper on paper because renting is cheaper than buying in most major U.S. metros today. In some markets, renting saves over $900 per month.

    The surface level logic says, “Why would I buy?” The counter argument is what happens to that money over the next 5 to 10 years if you do not? That’s where most people lose.

    Renting Feels Safe, But It Keeps you Stuck

    Let’s break this down in a way that actually matters to you. When you rent your payment builds zero equity. Your landlord benefits from appreciation and tax benefits, not you. Your housing cost can increase every year. You stay exposed to inflation with no hedge.

    Now compare that to ownership. Over a 10-year period, the average homeowner gained about $225,000 in wealth, while renters saw a net loss of $148,000 when factoring in costs and missed appreciation.

    That gap isn’t small. That gap is your retirement, your options, your leverage.

    The Wealth Gap is Real, and It’s Growing

    The median household wealth of homeowners is over 3,700% higher than renters.

    Read that again!

    This isn’t about preference. This is based on statistics. Numbers do not lie!

    If you keep renting for the next 10 years, what do you actually own? What increases in value for you? What can you leverage later? The answer is nothing.

    Why This Generation is Choosing to Rent

    You’re not wrong for renting. Most people today are renting because they feel they have no choice. In fact, 68% say they can’t afford a down payment. Nearly half say they can’t afford monthly mortgage payments. 47% say they rent because buying feels out of reach.

    This isn’t about laziness. It’s about uncertainty.

    The Hidden Cost of Waiting

    A lot of people say, “I’ll wait until the market gets better.” It sounds logical but what does that actually mean?

    Home prices historically trend upward over time. Waiting often means paying more later. Renting during that same timeline builds no equity.

    Even today, in many markets, owning is already more affordable than renting in nearly 60% of counties when measure against income.

    What You Should Really Be Asking

    This is where most people go wrong. They ask, “Is renting cheaper than buying right now?” That’s the wrong question. What they should be asking is:

    • Where will I be financially in 5 years if I keep renting?

    • What am I missing out on by not owning?

    • What would it take for me to actually buy?

    Once you ask better questions, you start seeing better options.

    The Bottom Line…

    Renting is not bad, but staying in a renting cycle without a plan is expensive. Short-term, renting can protect your cash flow. Long term, it can limit your wealth.

    Remember, one creates financial wealth for yourself and the other builds someone else’s future.

    A
    Author
    Local Professional

    Want to connect with Author?

    Ask, follow, or jump into the discussion on this article.

    Related articles

    Buying a Home in 2026: Mortgage Rates and Market Forecast

    Buying a Home in 2026: Mortgage Rates and Market Forecast

    Jul 6, 2026
    5 min
    30
    Mortgage Pre-Approval: Why Establishing a Budget Is Step One

    Mortgage Pre-Approval: Why Establishing a Budget Is Step One

    Jul 6, 2026
    5 min
    10
    Orange County Mortgage Pre-Approval: 2026 Guide for Buyers

    Orange County Mortgage Pre-Approval: 2026 Guide for Buyers

    Jul 2, 2026
    5 min
    10