---
title: "Renting vs. Buying in Aiken, SC — What the Numbers Say"
url: https://www.hereaiken.com/renting-vs-buying-aiken-sc/
date: 2026-06-01T04:42:32-04:00
modified: 2026-06-01T04:42:32-04:00
author: ""
site: "HERE Aiken"
attribution: "HERE Aiken"
---

# Renting vs. Buying in Aiken, SC — What the Numbers Say

*Source: [HERE Aiken](https://www.hereaiken.com/renting-vs-buying-aiken-sc/) — June 1, 2026 by *

Renter & Buyer Guides · Evergreen Guide
  

# Renting vs. Buying in Aiken Right Now — What the Numbers Say

  

The rent-versus-buy question has no universal answer. It has a calculation, and the inputs to the calculation change with interest rates, local rents, holding period, and household stability. This guide walks through the math honestly, the way the decision actually gets made.

  
    

## The Five-Year Rule, Updated

    

For decades, real estate folklore said five years of ownership covered transaction costs and produced a financial advantage over renting. In the current rate environment, that breakeven has stretched closer to six or seven years in most markets. Households planning to move within thirty-six months almost always come out ahead renting. Households planning to stay seven-plus years almost always come out ahead buying.

    

## The True Cost of Owning, Honestly Counted

    

Mortgage payment is one line. Add property taxes (1.5% to 2.5% of value annually in Aiken tax tiers), homeowner's insurance ($1,500 to $3,000 annually for most price points), HOA or condo dues if applicable, private mortgage insurance until 20% equity, and ongoing maintenance budgeted at 1% to 2% of property value annually. The all-in cost of ownership is routinely 30% to 50% higher than the principal-and-interest payment alone.

    

## The True Cost of Renting, Honestly Counted

    

Rent is one line, but renters carry no property tax, no insurance beyond renter's policy ($150 to $300 a year), no maintenance budget, and full mobility on a 30-to-60-day notice cycle. Renters who invest the difference between ownership cost and rent often end seven-year periods with more liquid wealth than buyers who tied up cash in equity that grew slowly.

    

## Equity Is Real, But Slow

    

In years one through five of a 30-year mortgage, roughly 75% of every payment goes to interest, not principal. A $400,000 loan at current rates pays down only $4,000 to $6,000 in principal in year one. Home appreciation, not amortization, is where most ownership wealth comes from — and home appreciation, historically, has averaged the inflation rate plus 1% to 2% annually. It is not a magic number.

    

## The Stability Premium Nobody Prices

    

Ownership locks the housing cost for the life of the loan (taxes and insurance excepted). Rents reset annually, often by 4% to 8% in tight rental markets. A household renting at $2,200 today and facing 6% annual rent increases will pay $3,150 monthly in year seven. A household with a fixed-rate mortgage at the same starting payment pays the same nominal amount. Compounding rent increases are the strongest financial argument for ownership in stable households.

    

## The Mobility Premium Nobody Discounts

    

Selling a home costs 7% to 9% of value in agent commission, transfer taxes, repairs, and closing costs. A homeowner forced to sell within twenty-four months of buying — for any reason, foreseen or not — usually loses money. Households facing job change, family change, or relocation risk should price that risk into the rent-versus-buy decision honestly, not optimistically.

    

## The Honest Calculation

    

Build a side-by-side seven-year cash flow. Column A: total rent paid, plus the investment return on the down payment had it been invested instead. Column B: total ownership cost (mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, HOA), minus equity gained through principal pay-down, minus appreciation at a conservative 3% annual rate, plus the 8% transaction cost at sale. Whichever column is smaller wins for that household, in that market, at that horizon.

    **Honest takeaway.** Renting is not throwing money away. Buying is not always the smarter move. The right answer depends on horizon, household stability, and the specific math in Aiken at the moment you are deciding. Run the numbers honestly, then commit.
  
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