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Home Purchase Planning

jJ_Chub·Updated Feb 2026

Total Cost of Ownership

Mortgage principal and interest represent only a portion of true homeownership cost. The mental trap: comparing mortgage payment to rent while ignoring 40-50% of actual housing cost. Complete cost modeling requires accounting for all recurring and non-recurring expenses:

Monthly Cost Breakdown ($500k Home, 20% Down, 7% Rate)
Visible Costs
Mortgage P&I$2,661
Property Tax (1.2%)$500
Homeowner's Insurance$150
Hidden Costs
Maintenance (1%/yr)$417
HOA (if applicable)$200
Opportunity cost*$333

*Opportunity cost: $100k down payment invested at 4%/year = $333/month forgone returns

true_monthly_cost = P&I + taxes + insurance + maintenance + HOA + opportunity_cost

Cost Comparison: Total monthly cost ~$4,261 for a $500k home — not $2,661. Compare this to equivalent rental plus investment returns on the down payment.

The Forced Savings Myth: "Paying yourself" through mortgage principal paydown sounds good, but the math is: you're earning your mortgage rate (minus inflation) on an illiquid, undiversified asset. The down payment tied up in home equity could compound at stock market returns. The "forced savings" argument only holds if you genuinely wouldn't invest the difference — and that's a behavioral issue, not a financial one.

Buy vs Rent Analysis

The rent-to-price ratio provides a rough heuristic for the buy/rent decision:

Break-Even Analysis: Transaction costs (6% selling + 2-5% buying = 8-11% total) require 3-7 years to amortize through appreciation and principal paydown. Shorter horizons favor renting.

When Buying Tends to Outperform

When Renting Tends to Outperform

Down Payment Considerations

Down payment size affects both monthly cash flow and opportunity cost:

Down Payment Trade-offs
  • 20% down — No PMI, lower monthly payment, higher opportunity cost
  • 10% down — PMI until 20% equity, more capital remains invested
  • 3-5% down — Maximum leverage, highest monthly cost, PMI for years

Liquidity Constraint: Maintain 3-6 months emergency fund after closing. Home repairs are non-deferrable expenses that don't wait for market recovery or next paycheck.

Affordability Ratios

Standard debt-to-income ratios used by lenders:

Try It

I'm 32, make $180k, spend $70k, saved $300k. How does buying a $700k home at age 35 affect retirement at 55?