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Does buying a home always beat renting?

There are many benefits to owning

By Liz Pulliam Weston
MSN Money Expert

President Bush’s 2003 tax cuts did more than put some money back in people’s wallets. For lots of folks, it also reduced – and in some cases, eliminated – the tax benefit they got from owning a home.

That certainly wasn’t the intent of the legislation. But by lowering tax brackets and, more importantly, boosting the standard deduction for married couples filing jointly, it certainly was the result. That shouldn’t cause you to shelve your plans to buy a house, however. The tax benefits to home ownership have long been exaggerated.

Benefits of home ownership

Fortunately, there are a lot of other good reasons to own a home. One of the best, financially speaking: the chance to benefit from appreciation as the value of your home (one would hope) rises through the years. Over the past 30 years, houses have appreciated, on average, six percent a year.

All calculations on home value come with caveats:

Rent vs. buy calculators

Since December 31, 1998, the S&P 500 is down 7.2 percent. But my home in the insanely hot Southern California market has appreciated about 65 percent. There’s no way I could have predicted the performance of either market-stock or real estate-in advance. Yet most of the "rent vs. buy" calculators you find on the Internet pretend that you can, and these base their results on those crystal-ball assumptions.

That’s not their only flaw. Just like many first-time buyers (and even some long-time homeowners), the calculators tend to ignore or underestimate the total costs of owning a house. Outlays for maintenance, repairs, insurance and utilities almost invariably will be greater for a homeowner than a renter, yet many calculators fail to consider the full impact of these expenses.

How you can win by owning

You’re most likely to win by owning, rather than renting, if the following are true:

Remember, if you’re the kind of person who lives on credit cards and doesn’t know where the money goes, you’d be smart to clean up your financial act long before you go hunting for a house.

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