House prices: the areas where it is cheaper to buy than rent

by Lorna Bourke on Jul 21, 2010 at 14:08

House prices: the areas where it is cheaper to buy than rent

Buying a home beats renting in 74% of locations around the UK – which is good news for first-time buyers, provided they can get the required deposit together and meet the lenders’ new tougher affordability criteria.

First-time buyers typically compete with landlords for the same properties and the other side of the coin is that for investors rents are higher in 74% of locations than the cost of buying, according to Zoopla, the property information group. 

This means investors ought to be able to get a healthy return on a relatively cheap investment – particularly in the light of several surveys which say that tenant demand outstrips supply in many areas. 

Average monthly mortgage repayments are 8% lower than the cost of renting in nearly three quarters of locations, assuming an interest-only mortgage at 5%. Given that interest-only mortgages, particularly for first-time buyers, are on the regulator’s hit list – but are still available for buy-to-let investors – this is good news for landlords.

Top buy-to-let areas 

So where are the areas where it is more expensive to rent than to buy? According to Zoopla, which looked at asking prices and rental values of two bedroom flats, even in London, which has the highest rents in the country, buying is still the more cost-effective option. Average rents on two-bed flats are currently at £2,155 a month while average asking prices are an eye-watering £446,345. But mortgage repayments at 5%  are lower at £1,859 a month.

For lower priced properties, investors should take a trip to Dundee which comes in top of the list of places where buying is currently the best option with average asking prices for two-bed flats at only £88,263 while average rents are £530 per month. The cost of financing a 100% mortgage (though you can’t get one) on an £88,263 flat at 5% works out at only £367 – some £163 a month less than the average rent earned.

Other locations around Britain where buying is by far the better choice at current asking prices include Birmingham, Derby, Cambridge, Milton Keynes, Nottingham, York, Peterborough and Norwich. Many of these are also university towns with a regular supply of student tenants – although some also have an oversupply of new build flats on which it is difficult to get a mortgage.  

Low rent areas 

‘Conventional wisdom, that buying is better than renting in the property market, holds true for most places around the country,’ explains Nicholas Leeming, commercial director of Zoopla. ‘However, there are places where renting is the better option which may be driven by an excess of buy-to-let flats or a shortage of properties for sale.’ 

Landlords should avoid buying in areas where renting is a better option than buying. Topping this list (which students should study before deciding on which university to attend) is Huddersfield, where the average two-bed flat costs only £493 per month to rent but £146,898 to buy. Renting is also cheaper than buying in a number of other places including Oldham, Brighton, Swansea, Bournemouth, Bristol, Cardiff, Plymouth, Stockport and Edinburgh – most of them university towns.

But a word of warning for would-be investors. It might be wise to opt for a fixed rate loan. If interest rates were to increase by 1% and rents to remain the same, the tables would be turned and renting would become more cost-effective in 80% of the locations studied. 

Negative factors

It would also be foolish to ignore the negative factors which have yet to show up in the statistics. Rising unemployment will take its toll of landlords who will suffer arrears and there is bound to be downward pressure from the Budget cap on housing benefit.

Housing benefit claimants are a significant force in the rental market. There are 4.72 million claimants and one million of those receive local housing allowance, the benefit for tenants in the private rental sector. In his Budget, the chancellor imposed caps on housing benefit of £400 a week for a four-bedroom property and £250 a week for a two- bedroom home.

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18 comments so far. Why not have your say?

Anonymous 1 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:05

OOooh liked the comment that people on benefits who can't now afford to meet the shortfall btw rent and govt allowances should move out of London.

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Anonymous 2 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:10

Well I guess its like if you cant pay the hotel bill then dont stay there. Should others really pay your rent for you?

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Anonymous 3 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:14

i thought this govt will come strong on benefits scammers but same stories just diff govt.

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Anonymous 4 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:23

Pass the second sentence of Anonymous 2 ' s comment to the whingeing Gold Trail clients.

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Graham Willows

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:24

Anonymous 4 knows a thing or two.

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Anonymous 5 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:39

Anon 4 + Graham: What a load of rubbish, people who cannot afford to live in London due to unemployment benefits should simply not live there. I work full time and pay my taxes; I do not wish to see the funds spent keeping people who don't want to work in shelter and cider. They can ever bugger off to somewhere income support can allow them to live (dustbin for all I care at this point). Orr....get a job, if this is inconvenient or difficult for them, I would say a resounding 'TOUGH'

AS for Gold Trail clients, comparing a travel operator unexpectedly going bust (unexpectedly to a layman who could not be expected to do due diligence of a travel company before using it) and people living in houses they cannot afford and therefore shouldn't live in is a p*** poor comparison.

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Anonymous 6 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:48

"Average rents on two-bed flats are currently at £2,155 a month while average asking prices are an eye-watering £446,345. But mortgage repayments at 5% are lower at £1,859 a month."

BIT OF A SELECTIVE BULLSH1T STATISTIC HERE, EVERYONE!!!

Where I live the average asking price for a 2 bed flat is £300K and the average rent is just £800pcm. Renting is cheaper than buying not only on the basis of cashflow, but also on the basis of overpriced property and insanely low interest rates.

"If interest rates were to increase by 1% and rents to remain the same, the tables would be turned and renting would become more cost-effective in 80% of the locations studied."

HMM, IF? IF???

The next big downphase in coming in Q3 2010 - an epic stocks and shares crash to make the 2007 Northern Rock failure and the Lehman Brothers collapse look puny by comparison.

INTEREST RATES GOING UP BY AUTUMN. FACT.

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Anonymous 7 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 15:59

Repayments on a £446k mortgage only total £1.8k if it is interest only and taken over 30 years. Not sure how many Banks provide 30 year interest only mortgages? On top of that the figures do not take into account cost of ownership such as insurance and repairs/renewals.

Load of rubbish.

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Jonathan

Jul 21, 2010 at 16:18

With interest rates at 0.5% I'm surprised that it isn't cheaper to buy than rent everywhere. However, if interest rates go up then it will change the equation and it will be cheaper to rent than buy in most places.

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Anonymous 8 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 21, 2010 at 16:29

Costs of owning versus renting should include more than just mortgage repayments - for example, on the flat I let out, annual service charges are well over £3,000 and I am also responsible for other expenses such as repairs, insurance, etc.

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Anonymous 9 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 22, 2010 at 09:59

Just comparing rent with mortgage is a very incomplete comparison. What about maintenance costs, decoration, service charges and risk of large unexpected bills (all covered by the landlord) and the loss in income on the deposit. You cannot get a good mortgage rate without a big deposit and the loss of income should not just be assumed to be the loss of (risk free) bank interest because a deposit on a property is a very high-risk investment, so should be compared with far higher yielding risk assets e.g. 7% paying or even 10% APR Add to that up to 5% stamp duty, other costs of buying and the real risk of a drop in house prices and an almost certainty of a significant increase in interest rates and buying is only cheaper than renting (in the short-term) if you assume house-prices will continue their improbable rise. Of course in the very long term renting is usually more expensive, otherwise why would landlords bother?

I live in a London property allegedly worth £800,000+ with a rent of £1,750 a month (i.e. about 2.5% of the value). The £400 a month service charge is paid for by the landlord, as are the regular maintenance and plumbing costs and the new boiler we had fitted etc. (i.e. rent is really nearer 1.5% of the value) I could bought a similar property, but chose to invest the money and pay the rent with the derived income (with plenty to spare) Renting is far cheaper if you do a proper risk-based comparison instead of this simplistic headline grabbing school-boy maths.

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Bill lawson

Jul 22, 2010 at 10:32

All families should OWN their homes even if its only a mud hut . Buy to let is very wrong and with the present financial situation many who have used this to make money will get their fingers burnt .

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Douglas

Jul 22, 2010 at 11:27

Are you living in this world Bill Lawson? Not everyone can buy and why is it wrong to provide shelter to those that are not able to buy their own property?

Do you expect the landlord to provide acommodation free?

So all the councils that have let out rented properties for many years, paid for by the taxpayer are wrong not to mention housing associations that rent out property to the needy, again from money invested by people looking for a return on their investment. They are no different to private landlords, each have invested in properties to rent out, in the hope they will see a return on their inestment. Many private landlords have lost their investment, it is not an eaeasy ride.

Thick headed people like you make me sick, you sit on your high moral horse, making stupid comments. The real truth is, you can't afford to buy or you have not got the guts to risk your own money.

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Anonymous 9 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 22, 2010 at 12:05

Lorna. Sorry about the "school-boy maths" remark. That wasn't aimed at you. Perhaps the headline should read:

"Areas where mortgages are cheaper than rents" or

"Areas where the cost of renting the money required to buy 75% of a property is less than the cost of renting 100% of a property (and have someone else take all of the risk and pay the stamp-duty, initial costs, taxes and running costs)"

Not quite such a catchy title though perhaps?

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Rajah Brookes

Jul 22, 2010 at 12:27

I'm with Anonymous 6 and Jonathon. This whole article is a bit pointless given that it is based on unprecedented never seen before interest rates of 0.5%. Given how long they have been at that level it is more surprising that we are not experiencing rocket fuelled house price growth of 20-30% a year. If interest rates were to go back up to 'normal' levels of 5-10% then it'd be interesting to see how 'affordable' houses look then.

BTW the article doesn't take into account, that the boom in top-end large country house rental demand might be because the smart money is getting out of property ownership altogether till after the forthcoming deflationary crash! I live on Dartmoor and roughly 50% of the £1m plus houses are on the market at the moment in our area. No sign of buyers though!

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L MACKAY

Jul 22, 2010 at 15:11

Renting at £2000 and mortgage of £1850. All is well until you have a void/non-payment, then suddenly you have to find a spare £1850pm

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Bill lawson

Jul 22, 2010 at 15:38

Sorry DOUGLAS did I touch a nerve , I built my house and I am not a builder in 1968 and still living in it (now worth £500,000) Young people try to buy at the bottom of the market but are priced out by people like you that inflate property prices. There is nothing wrong with council houses I grew up in one. get real yourself.

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Anonymous 10 needed this 'off the record'

Jul 24, 2010 at 11:25

Congratulations Bill Lawson REAL Sane comments.

As for Douglas I suppose it has escaped your attention, that people who buy lo let do NOT enter into the transaction to provide some POOR sole with a house, but to make money out of them. Also buying to let only helps to inflate prices which makes it even less possible for the poor that you are fleecing to buy. However I am sure that you sleep well.

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