---
title: "In much of California, renting is now far cheaper than buying, a report finds"
description: "A new analysis finds that in Los Angeles and most other major California cities, the monthly cost of renting is now well below the cost of buying a comparable home, a gap of roughly $2,000 a month in the LA area. High home prices and mortgage rates near 6.5 percent have pushed ownership out of reach for many, even as buying still builds equity that renting never will."
category: "California"
category_url: https://herald.la/category/california
author: "Gabriela Soto"
published: 2026-07-16T22:53:00.000Z
updated: 2026-07-16T22:53:00.000Z
canonical: https://herald.la/article/in-much-of-california-renting-is-now-far-cheaper-than-buying-a-report-finds
tags: ["housing", "california", "los angeles", "rent", "affordability"]
---
# In much of California, renting is now far cheaper than buying, a report finds

A new analysis finds that in Los Angeles and most other major California cities, the monthly cost of renting is now well below the cost of buying a comparable home, a gap of roughly $2,000 a month in the LA area. High home prices and mortgage rates near 6.5 percent have pushed ownership out of reach for many, even as buying still builds equity that renting never will.

For years, the conventional wisdom held that buying a home, however painful the price, beat "throwing money away" on rent. In much of California right now, the math has flipped. A new analysis finds that renting is substantially cheaper, month to month, than buying a comparable home across the state's largest metro areas, Los Angeles included.

## The gap

In the Los Angeles area, the report finds, a renter pays [roughly $2,000 or more less per month than someone buying a similar property](https://ktla.com/news/california/california-rent-vs-buy-housing-report/) would spend on a mortgage, a difference that adds up to tens of thousands of dollars a year. Los Angeles is not even the widest gap in the state: in the Bay Area's most expensive markets, the monthly premium to buy runs far higher still. Across California's major metros, the analysis finds the same direction, renting costs less each month than buying.

## Why it's happening

The cause is the collision of two numbers. California home prices remain near record highs, with typical mid-tier homes priced well above the national average, and mortgage rates have hovered [around 6.5 percent](https://www.zumper.com/blog/rent-vs-buy-in-2026/), roughly double the sub-3-percent rates buyers enjoyed a few years ago. Put a high price on top of a high rate, and the monthly payment on a purchase balloons past what the same home rents for. That has priced a growing share of households out of ownership entirely, unable to qualify for the loans the market demands.

## The catch buyers know

None of this means renting is simply the better deal. The comparison is a monthly one, and it leaves out the central advantage of owning: a mortgage payment builds equity, slowly converting housing costs into wealth, while rent buys only shelter. Over decades, homeowners have typically come out ahead as properties appreciate and loans are paid down. The rent-versus-buy picture also rests on today's prices and rates; if rates fall or prices soften, the balance can shift back toward buying.

## What it means for Angelenos

For now, though, the near-term calculation is unforgiving, and for many Los Angeles residents without a large down payment or a high income, renting preserves cash flow that buying would strain to the breaking point. The findings are less a verdict on the wisdom of ownership than a snapshot of a housing market badly out of balance, one where the dream of buying has drifted out of reach for many of the people who live and work in the city, and where the shortage of homes that drives prices up shows no quick sign of easing.

## Sources

- [Renting far cheaper than buying in California's largest metro areas, report finds](https://ktla.com/news/california/california-rent-vs-buy-housing-report/)
- [Rent vs. buy in 2026](https://www.zumper.com/blog/rent-vs-buy-in-2026/)

