Is it better to rent or buy a house in Spain?
Raf Jacobs
Your PROPERTY EXPERT for Spain. Informed decisions and Zero risk. Buyer Agent. Professor Real Estate. Property seminars.
A small reflection exercise to start with:?
just think of someone you consider professionally and financially successful. Got that person visualized? Now, is that person renting or owning their house?
The answer to that question kind of summarizes the most important difference between renting and buying a property, in Spain or anywhere in the world: when owning you create wealth for yourself, when renting you help your landlord getting wealthier. Of course, renting can be an easier and better option in the short run, it gives you more flexibility and requires less commitment. But in this article, I go beyond the textbook comparison. I will give you a deep dive analysis of why owning a property is (often) the better solution, with practical exercises to compare both options in your specific situation and with your actual income and savings. So in the end, you also know what type of property you can afford at which cost per month.
A review of my previous articles?What Will the Impact of the Corona Virus Be On the Property Market in Spain??and??Will Spain See a Real Estate Boom?, will give you a pretty good idea of what the property market in Spain recently was, is and might become in the near future. To summarize: COVID-19 created a buyer’s market, with lower house prices and interest rates at historically low levels. In the meantime, several indicators predict a possible end to this trend, but only to a certain extent. There will be a real estate boom—as I call it—with higher house prices and (slightly) higher interest rates. But we’re not there yet. That’s why now is the time to switch from your renting contract to one at the notary.
Create Wealth for You or for Your Landlord?
The choice between renting or owning comes down to the question above. I’ll give you an overview of the pros and cons of both options.
Renting
Owning Your Property
Renting or Buying a Property? Comparing the Options with Actual Numbers.
Let’s go beyond the theory and compare both options with an exercise that contains your actual numbers and financial indicators—probably in a way you never looked at before.
The table below shows different monthly rental amounts as the starting point. Let’s visualize it with a different persona: You’re new in Spain and start off by renting a room in a shared apartment for €500 per month. This is?a classic starting situation in cities like Barcelona. That will cost you €6,000 per year or €60,000 over 10 years. Why 10 years? That is the average period people generally rent. That might sound long, but 10 years go by faster than you think.
Discover your own situation in the table below (taking into account these illustrations are not adapted for inflation or any other economic or financial impact):
Now compare this rental cost to your financial situation. Again, a table with different options.
Imagine your net income is €2,500 per month, or €30,000 per year net (that will be around 50,000 to 60,000 gross). If your monthly rental cost is then €1,000 and you rent for 10 years, that means you need to work four full years to pay that rent. That’s nearly two weeks per month you work for your landlord.
Of course, if you earn more, that number will decrease. If your net income is €5,000 per month, and you’re still in that €1,000 flat, then it takes you only two years to pay off your 10 year rent.
What Can I Do With My Savings?
In the rent-or-buy dilemma, the decision to actually start the buying process often depends on the amount you have saved. That also came to surface during a recent market research analysis at INSPIRE. When asking potential customers the simple question “Why didn’t you buy yet?” the top answer was “not enough savings.”
But let’s go a step back and look at what alternatives you have for your savings, and why it’s more interesting to put it into a house or a mortgage down payment.
Imagine you have €60,000 in savings. What can you do with that?
Let’s dig into this last option a bit more.
How Much Property Can I Buy with My Savings?
In my daily job as a property buyer agent in Spain, the number one remark I always get from buyers is: “I don’t know what I can actually purchase.” Or sometimes it’s phrased as: “I’m not sure what I want exists,” or “I don’t know if the bank will give me enough money to purchase what I want.”
In that previous example of €60,000 savings, I revealed the outcome already without much further explanation: give those €60,000 to the bank with a mortgage that gives you access to a house worth up to €400,000.
That is called “financial leverage”: you buy a property with limited savings and you can get access to something that is worth X times that investment. As the house will be yours, it can provide you with future rental income that exceeds the costs of the mortgage and other owner-related costs. It becomes a long term asset that can increase in value and generate future income/capital gains. That is called the “multiplier effect.”
For all those other investment options, the stock market for example, that leverage effect does not exist. Your €60,000 investment will be worth nothing more than that €60,000 (at the start).
How much money a bank decides to give you, taking into account your savings and your specific property and situation, depends on their loan to value ratio (LTV). And, of course, also assuming you have a stable income, a work contract and a normal spending profile.
If you are a Spanish resident (paying taxes in Spain) with a classic standard-risk profile, that LTV% typically goes up to 80% or in some cases even to 90%. That means you only need to put 20% or 10% of your own savings on the table. That percentage drops if for example,?you’re not a resident or are independent. But it’s always worth talking to different banks to get their appraisals. Every bank is different and looks differently at your profile. Some banks prefer first time buyers (to get them for a longer lifetime), other banks are more risk-averse and prefer people with more money in the bank.
So How Much Money Do You Need to Put On the Table and How Do Banks Look at That?
Let’s explain it with an example, in the table below.
Two scenarios:?
Table 1. The bank is NOT financing the purchase tax (of 10%)
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Here, I took two options for the property purchase price: €200,000 and €400,000. If the LTV% is 80% and you need to put a 20% down payment, that is €40,000 or €80,000. And then your mortgage needs to be €160,000 or €320,000.
Some additional costs apply to purchasing a property in Spain:
The purchase tax (10% of the purchase price) and some notary and land registry costs (in total no more than around €2,000). As stated, in this scenario, the bank does not finance these costs, so you’ll need to pay them out of your own pocket.
Adding that means:
Table 2. The bank is financing the purchase tax.
This was an actual INSPIRE customer case a couple of months ago. So if the bank is offering you a higher LTV% (in this case 87%) and they also finance the taxes and extra costs, then you can buy a property of €400,000 with only €59,000 in savings.
Of course, not every bank does that. And your monthly payment will be different in the two scenarios too.
Your next step should then be: how much can you afford to pay to the bank each month? What amount of cash-out fits your lifestyle?
Concrete Example of a Recent Buyer
Let me share with you another practical, real-life example of a recent client of INSPIRE. Let’s call him Mike. Mike had around €50,000 in savings and was renting a room in a shared apartment in Eixample, Barcelona. He paid €550 per month for the room.
He was tired of sharing his home, wanted more privacy and peace and asked us to help him find a place of his own. And we did. We found him a move-in ready, three-bedroom, 63 square meter apartment, with some outside space. It’s located in Vallcarca, so a bit outside the city center of Barcelona, but it’s quiet, with lots of parks and it’s still very well connected to the center. It’s an area he adores.
We negotiated the purchase price down to €220,000, while the bank valued the property at €230,000. His down payment to the bank was €44,000 (20%) and because he met some specific criteria of age and income, he benefited from a reduced 5% purchase tax. With a 1.4% fixed interest rate over 30 years, he now pays €600 per month for his mortgage.
The big picture is clear: with a similar budget, Mike now has his privacy, and a bigger apartment than the room he was living in before.
But financially, is Mike really better off? As he is paying €600 per month now to the bank, instead of €500 to his landlord, he’s paying €50 more monthly. But, comparing payouts is not really the correct way. The true new housing cost for Mike is not the total mortgage payment, but the interest rate alone, as this is the true cost of his mortgage.
Breaking down the €600 monthly cash-out: (year one)
This €200 interest cost needs to be compared to the rent of €550. So, long term, Mike has a monthly savings of €350! Additionally, Mike now owns his apartment, so he gets something in exchange for the monthly cost that previously went to his landlord.
Cost of Buying a Property in Spain
Besides the cost of a mortgage, owning a property in Spain comes with some other costs as well. Let me give you an overview, connected with an example of a €300,000 property.
In General, the First Step in Your Rent-or-Buy Decision (Or Any Property Purchase) Should Be:
Having these financial numbers in mind, you should always be mindful of the fact that owning a property puts you in a better financial position; it makes your money productive by?investing in something that is yours. So, analysis your situation well and if buying turns out to be your perfect solution; maybe you’ll turn out to be the “professionally and financially successful person” you thought of in the beginning of this article.
Stay an Informed Player
If you want to be well-versed, save money, avoid disturbances and conflicts of interest, this is what you can do:
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Arquitecta técnica | Architectural technologist | BIM Modeler
3 年Great article Raf ?? Thanks for all the info!