Rent vs buy (London) — comparison

Cashflow-first comparison, with an optional advanced view that includes SDLT and selling costs. No cookies.

Step-by-step inputs (mobile friendly)

Step 1 — Renting

Examples: storage, commute difference, renter’s insurance.

Step 2 — Buying

Examples: service charge, ground rent, buildings insurance, maintenance buffer.

Step 3 — Horizon

We show monthly cashflow, totals over the horizon, and an optional “net cost after sale” estimate.

Advanced assumptions (optional)

These are assumptions (not predictions). Keep them conservative.

Shareable link: inputs are stored in the URL querystring (visible) instead of cookies.

Sticky results
Renting (monthly)
Buying (monthly)
Difference (buy − rent)
Total paid over horizon (rent)
Total paid over horizon (buy)
Upfront buy costs (SDLT + fees)
Equity after horizon (rough)
Buy net cost (paid + upfront − equity)

Interpretation: “Buy net cost” is a simplified estimate of how much cash you effectively spent after selling. It depends heavily on assumptions (growth, fees, rates). Not financial guidance.

Explain like I’m busy

Renting is mostly a straight line: rent goes out. Buying is lumpy: big upfront costs (SDLT, legal fees), then monthly payments, and later you may get money back when you sell (equity) — but selling has costs too.