Rent vs Buy a $600K Home: Full Cost Comparison
Home Price
$600K
Monthly Rent
$2,500
Down Payment (20%)
$120K
Est. Break-Even
0.9 yrs
Buying a $600K home at today's 6.75% rate requires a $120K down payment (20%) and results in a monthly mortgage payment of $3,113. Add $550/month in property taxes (1.1% average) and $500/month in maintenance, and total monthly homeownership costs are ~$4,163 — compared to $2,500/month renting equivalent housing. That's $1,663/month more to own upfront.
The price-to-rent ratio at this price point is 20 — in the neutral zone where the right choice depends on your timeline. The $18K in closing costs (3%) creates an initial hurdle that takes time to overcome through equity building and appreciation. At 3.5% annual appreciation, a $600K home gains ~$21K/year in value — a major long-term advantage for buyers.
The break-even point — where buying surpasses renting in total net worth — is approximately 0.9 years. This assumes you invest the rent-vs-buy monthly cost difference and down payment in stocks at 7% annual return. Breaking even in 0.9 years is relatively fast, making buying attractive even for medium-term horizons.
Beyond the break-even, homeownership at this price level builds $86K in mortgage principal per year (early years), plus appreciation. Over 10 years, the total equity gain from a $600K home at 3.5% appreciation is ~$246K, creating substantial wealth that renting cannot replicate. Tax deductions (mortgage interest, property taxes up to SALT limits) further favor buyers in higher tax brackets.