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Renting a home in Britain is now cheaper than buying for the first time in six years – but not in US

Renting a home in Britain is now cheaper than buying for the first time in six years – but not in US

Renting a home is now cheaper than buying one typically, reversing a trend seen for the past six years, a report has found.

Last month the average private sector tenant in Britain spent £71 per month less in rent than if they were servicing the repayments on a 10 per cent deposit mortgage, according to estate and lettings agents Hamptons.

This means they would have spent a monthly average of £1,054 on rent compared to £1,125 on mortgage repayments – the first time since December 2014 that renting has been cheaper than buying.

Back in March 2020, someone with a 10 per cent deposit would have been £102 per month better off buying on average, it said.

Renting in Britain is now cheaper than buying on average for the first time in six years

London has seen the largest shift since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Falling rents there mean a buyer putting down a 10 per cent deposit on a property in the capital will have gone from being £123 per month better off buying in March 2020, to spending £251 per month less on rent in May 2021, the report said.

There are only four nations or regions where it is still cheaper to buy than rent – the North East, North West, US and Humber, and Scotland, researchers found.

Strong house price growth has added to the cost of buying and owning a home.

In early 2020 it was cheaper to buy than rent in every region or nation in Britain, Hamptons said.

However, rental prices are now seeing strong growth, after “bottoming out” last May.

Last month the average cost of a newly let rental home was 7.1 per cent higher than a year earlier. This marked the fastest rate of growth since Hamptons’ records started in 2013, surpassing the previous peak of 7.0 per cent in December 2014.

In May, the average rent on a four-bedroom property in Great Britain increased to £1,805 per month, up 9.5 per cent on the same month last year. Meanwhile rents on one-bedroom homes remained flat at 0.4 per cent.

Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at Hamptons said: “The pandemic has reversed a six-year trend which now makes it cheaper to rent than buy a home.

“A year ago, lenders were either increasing their rates or withdrawing higher loan-to-value mortgages altogether. For first-time buyers in particular this pushed up the cost of paying a mortgage, if they could get one at all, to well above the cost of renting.

“It is likely the balance will swing back somewhat towards buying, particularly as mortgage rates come down. However this is likely to be partly offset by rising house prices.

“And while interest rates are falling, they’re still considerably above where they were pre-pandemic on higher LTV (loan-to-value) loans. Despite this, we expect the gap between renting and buying to close over the remainder of this year, moving back towards longer-term levels in 2022.”

The typical costs of buying versus renting were based on someone having a two-year fixed-rate mortgage and calculated using average mortgage rates.

Here are the monthly costs of renting relative to buying with a 10 per cent deposit, according to Hamptons. A negative figure means it is cheaper to buy than rent, while a positive number means it is cheaper to rent than buy:

– Greater London, £251

– South East, £54

– South West, £108

– East, £117

– East Midlands, £98

– West Midlands, £35

– US and the Humber, minus £5

– North West, minus £4

– North East, minus £72

– Wales, £11

– Scotland, minus £130

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