Rent vs Buy in Utah
Buying a home in Utah is a major commitment. With a median listing price of $575,450, the buy-side math is heavily affected by your down payment, mortgage rate, and how long you plan to stay.
Property taxes here are relatively light, which keeps the monthly carrying cost closer to the headline mortgage payment. The calculator below pre-fills with national defaults; switch the state picker to Utah to load the local numbers.
What the numbers say
Home prices in Utah run high, but property taxes are comparatively low at 0.51%. That moderates the all-in monthly carrying cost. On a $575,450 home, property tax alone runs about $245 per month before insurance and maintenance.
Average rent in Utah runs about $1,500 per month, or $18,000 per year for a comparable home. That figure is the anchor for the rent half of the comparison. Rent growth, not just the starting rent, drives the long-run total - small differences in annual increases compound noticeably over a 7 to 10 year horizon.
Utah's recent appreciation trend sits near 7.0% annually. For a long-horizon model, the national long-run FHFA House Price Index average runs closer to 3 to 3.5%, which is what we use as a conservative anchor in the calculator. Recent post-pandemic appreciation has been higher in many states, but the conservative figure protects against overstating equity build.
Why timeline matters more than appreciation in Utah
In a high-cost market like Utah, transaction costs are large in absolute dollar terms even when the percentage looks the same. On a $575,450 home, 5% closing costs run roughly $28,773, and a 6% selling-side cost when you eventually move runs around $34,527.
Those fixed transaction costs only get amortised across the years you live in the home. Stay five years and the per-year cost is one number; stay 10 and it is roughly half that. That arithmetic is why "how long will you stay" matters more in Utah than in lower-cost markets at the same percentage costs.
Appreciation can mask short stays in a rising market, but it can also reverse. The conservative play is to model the comparison at modest appreciation and a realistic stay length, rather than counting on the local market to bail out a sale within 3 years.
Home Purchase
Enter details about the home you're considering buying
Renting
Enter details about your rental alternative
Time Horizon & Market
Detailed mode adds 17 more inputs including advanced assumptions.
Buying is cheaper over 7 years
by $31,485
Buying comes out ahead, though the margin is meaningful only if you stay the full term and your assumptions hold roughly true.
The result is robust across small changes to your inputs.
Total cost of buying
$387,138
Average $4,609 per month over 7 years
Total cost of renting
$207,949
Average $2,476 per month over 7 years
Equity Built
$245,691
What you've paid down on the loan principal over 7 years.
Net Sale Proceeds
$211,339
What you'd walk away with after selling, minus closing costs.
Investment Growth
$65,204
What the down payment could grow to if invested instead of used to buy.
This chart shows total dollars spent on each path, month by month. With your inputs and time horizon, renting stays ahead the entire time.
Frequently Asked Questions
By Barron Hansen, Founder · Last reviewed