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Rent-or-buy issue turns on time and risk factors

Dear Real Estate Adviser,
I'm planning on moving to an area for four years and then relocating somewhere else after that. Is it better to buy a house if I have the means and then sell it after four years, or should I just rent for the four years and save my money for a house in the future?
-- Mo

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Dear Mo,
A short-term stay in a new area often favors renting because of the closing costs, down payment and other upfront expenses and complexities associated with a home purchase. But a four-year stay starts to skew the other way.

To a large degree, it depends where you are heading and how much risk you can stomach. In large metro areas where real estate is pricier and has the potential for more volatility, you may not want to take the chance, especially if you believe the market is at or past the market peak. Of course, the same risk could lead to a big reward as we've seen in recent years, with many homeowners in Southern California and other highly desirable areas of the country making six-figure profits on their home investments in far shorter stays than four years. Most experts say the days of such wildfire appreciation are coming to an end, but they don't know for sure.

Smaller markets, on the other hand, are usually more stable to buy in, providing they have economies that are reasonably diverse.

A good place to start is at Bankrate's buy-or-rent interactive calculator which will help you gauge the numbers. There are many other similar calculators available free online. Most, by the way, account for 3 percent to 4 percent annual appreciation, but the more aggressive you are in finding reasonable financing terms and a more-for-the-money home, the more the numbers fall in the favor of "buy."

Four years may be a little long to plant yourself as a renter without all the custom comforts that you enjoy with home ownership. If you find the right rental, nesting may be less of an issue for you, although a good rental will often cost you more than the house payment/tax/insurance/maintenance monies you'd be spending on a similar place -- though not always. But if you're looking for a bargain rental, it will probably take more than just a cursory weekend visit to your destination town to find one.

If you do buy, I suggest you put your house back on the market as much as a year before you plan to move again, just to give yourself maximum bargaining flexibility and preparation time. You might not want to be saddled with selling a house while you're trying to relocate again. If you do sell it early, you can always take up temporary residence in more humble rental property or extended-stay hotel and store your excess belongings in the current or new city.

You're on that precarious rent-buy border line. The safe play, of course, is to rent. The bolder play is to buy prudently and hope the market sustains itself.

Good luck in your decision.

Bankrate.com's corrections policy-- Posted: Oct. 22, 2005
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