Buying vs Renting in India — The Math Most People Get Wrong (2026)
Last verified: April 2026, against current home loan rate cards (8.5-9.5% for floating-rate home loans), Section 24(b) provisions, and tier-1 city rent yields (1.5-3.5% in Mumbai/Delhi/Bengaluru).
Indian families have been told for decades: “Don’t waste money on rent; buy a flat.” It sounds intuitive — rent is “spending,” EMI is “investing.” But run the numbers honestly with current home loan rates (8.5%+) and rental yields (~3% in tier-1 cities), and the math is closer than most people realise. For some profiles, renting + investing the difference builds more wealth than buying. This guide walks through both sides with a worked example for a ₹1 Cr Bengaluru flat.
The buying-side cash flow
Property: ₹1 Cr 2BHK in Bengaluru. 20% down payment (₹20 L). 80% home loan (₹80 L) at 8.5% for 20 years.
| One-time costs | Amount |
|---|---|
| Down payment (20%) | ₹20,00,000 |
| Stamp duty + registration (Karnataka, ~6.6%) | ₹6,60,000 |
| Brokerage / processing fees | ₹40,000 |
| Interior + furniture (basic) | ₹5,00,000 |
| Total upfront | ₹32,00,000 |
| Recurring (annual) | Amount |
|---|---|
| Home loan EMI (₹80 L at 8.5% for 20 yr) | ₹83,400/month × 12 = ₹10,00,000 |
| Society maintenance | ~₹60,000 |
| Property tax | ~₹8,000 |
| Home insurance + repairs reserve | ~₹40,000 |
| Periodic interior refresh (amortised) | ~₹50,000 |
| Annual total (Year 1) | ~₹11,58,000 |
Tax savings (old regime, ₹2 L Sec 24(b) interest deduction + ₹1.5 L 80C principal — within combined cap): ~₹1.0-1.2 L tax saved annually for 30%-slab earner. New regime: ~₹50K saved on Sec 24(b) for let-out only — see tax regime comparison.
Net annual cash outflow (old regime): ~₹10.5 L for the first few years.
The renting-side cash flow
Same ₹1 Cr Bengaluru flat. Typical rent: ₹35,000-45,000/month (rent yield ~3.5-4.5%).
| One-time | Amount |
|---|---|
| Brokerage (1 month rent) | ~₹40,000 |
| Security deposit (10 months in Bengaluru) | ₹4,00,000 (refundable, opportunity cost only) |
| Move-in costs (basic furnishing) | ₹1,50,000 |
| Recurring (annual) | Amount |
|---|---|
| Rent (₹40K/month) | ₹4,80,000 |
| Society maintenance (often included; sometimes separate) | ₹0-30,000 |
| 10% rent escalation typical | +₹48K next year |
| HRA exemption tax saving (old regime, 30% slab) | ~₹50,000-1.0 L (saving) |
| Net annual outflow | ~₹4.0-4.5 L |
The crucial bit — what the renter does with the difference
The buyer pays ~₹10.5 L/year. The renter pays ~₹4.5 L/year. Difference: ~₹6 L/year of cash flow.
Plus: the buyer’s ₹32 L upfront + the renter’s ₹4 L deposit = ₹28 L of opportunity cost capital sitting with the buyer.
If the renter invests the cash-flow difference (₹6 L/year) + the freed ₹28 L upfront in equity at 12% CAGR over 20 years:
- ₹28 L lump sum @ 12% × 20 years = ~₹2.7 Cr
- ₹6 L/year SIP @ 12% × 20 years = ~₹4.6 Cr
- Renter’s wealth at year 20: ~₹7.3 Cr (post-tax ~₹6.5 Cr)
Now the buyer at year 20:
- Owns the flat (loan paid off)
- Flat value at year 20 assuming 5% real estate CAGR: ₹1 Cr × 1.05^20 = ~₹2.65 Cr
- Plus EPF contributions, plus the EMI savings post Year 20 (₹83K/month × 12 × N years)
The renter’s pure-equity portfolio (₹6.5 Cr) substantially exceeds the buyer’s flat value (₹2.65 Cr) — assuming Bengaluru real estate appreciates at 5% CAGR. If real estate appreciates 8% CAGR, the buyer’s flat is worth ~₹4.66 Cr at year 20 — closer but still behind.
The math reverses if equity returns disappoint (8-9% CAGR over 20 years) or real estate booms (10%+ CAGR). And the buyer still has the asset to live in / let out.
The non-financial side — when buying still wins
- Stability and tenure security. 11-month rent agreements + landlord caprice + forced relocation every 2-3 years cost real money and stress.
- Customisation. Renters can’t repaint, redo bathrooms, install custom furniture without landlord permission.
- Forced savings. EMI is a discipline; “invest the difference” requires actual discipline. Many renters spend the difference rather than invest it.
- Cultural / family considerations. Owning is psychologically meaningful in Indian context; family expectations matter.
- Inflation hedge. EMI is fixed (or floats with rates) while rent rises ~10% annually. After 7-8 years, EMI looks small compared to current rents in the same area.
The buying-decision framework — when buy actually wins
Buy if:
- Time horizon > 7-10 years — transaction costs (stamp duty + brokerage + interior) take this long to amortise
- EMI < 35-40% of monthly income — over-leveraging is the #1 reason home-loan buyers regret
- 20% + 6.6% stamp duty available without depleting all savings — emergency fund must remain
- Rental yield > 4% in your target area — Mumbai luxury yields 1.5-2%, terrible buy economics; tier-2 city outskirts often 4-6%, better economics
- You’re emotionally committed to the city for 10+ years — career mobility hates real estate ownership
Rent if:
- Time horizon under 5-7 years (probable city/career change)
- Rental yield under 3% (tier-1 luxury or trophy areas)
- You have discipline to invest the EMI-vs-rent difference
- You’re early in career and salary growth is high (renting frees capital for high-return ventures)
The math gets uglier with builder homes
“Under-construction” properties carry additional friction: 5-7% GST during purchase, possession-delay risk, pre-EMI till possession, project-completion uncertainty. Ready-to-move-in resale flats are often the smarter buy economically; new builder projects are bought for “quality” or location reasons.
Linked deep-dives
- Home loan EMI + prepayment strategy
- Stamp duty + registration charges by state
- HRA exemption rules
- Old vs New Tax Regime — Sec 24(b)
- SIP guide — investing the difference
- EMI Calculator
- Home Loan Eligibility Calculator
FAQs
Is rent really wasted money?
No. Rent is the cost of housing services — same as EMI without the asset accumulation. The “wasted money” framing ignores opportunity cost of the down payment + transaction costs.
What’s the typical rental yield in major Indian cities?
Mumbai: 1.5-2.5%. Delhi NCR: 2-3%. Bengaluru: 3-4%. Hyderabad: 3-4.5%. Pune: 2.5-3.5%. Tier-2 cities often higher (4-6%). Lower yield = stronger renting case; higher yield = stronger buying case.
How do I factor in property appreciation?
Real estate has historically delivered 5-7% CAGR in major Indian cities (lower in last 5 years). If you assume 7%+ vs 12% expected equity return, the rent + invest case still wins by a smaller margin. Buy decisions should bake in 5% as base assumption, not 10%.
Is buying a smaller flat better than renting a bigger one?
Often yes, financially — but lifestyle compromise matters. Calculate the EMI vs rent gap: if a ₹50 L 1BHK has ₹40K EMI and the equivalent rented 2BHK is ₹35K, you’re paying for an asset, but you’ve sacrificed living space.
What if my employer reimburses housing?
Tilts heavily toward renting. Employer-paid rent (with appropriate perquisite tax) costs you 30-40% less than market — a major housing-affordability lever for senior employees in MNCs.
Should NRIs buy property in India for investment?
Mostly no, for investment-only purposes. NRO rental income, lower yields, repatriation friction, and FEMA reporting overhead make pure-investment NRI property purchases inefficient. Buy for personal use (eventual return / retirement) or for parents.
Sources & references
- RBI Master Direction on housing loans
- Section 24(b) and 80C of the Income Tax Act
- Major bank home loan rate cards (April 2026)
- JLL / Knight Frank / Anarock rental yield reports for tier-1 Indian cities
Last verified: April 2026. Real estate trends and home loan rates change with macro conditions; verify current numbers in your target city.