Bank of America’s 2024 Homebuyer Insights Report Explores The Long-term Consequences Renters Feel

Every year, Bank of America’s Homebuyer Insights Report explores consumer preferences and behaviors to better understand the goals and challenges facing homebuyers and homeowners. This year, we compared perceptions and feelings toward renting versus owning a home, including which option consumers believe has a stronger long-term benefit on their finances. Our goal is to better understand challenges and motivations among homebuyers to provide the best resources for them to achieve their goals, whether they are first-time buyers or planning to buy a second home. Here are the topics we looked at:

Homebuyers Feel Renting Could be Detrimental to their Financial Future

Uncertainty over whether to keep renting or to buy a home in the current market has grown, with 57% of survey respondents saying they’re unsure whether it’s a good time to buy, compared to 48% at this time last year. While 37% of respondents say renting is the better choice right now, 70% of prospective buyers feel they’re not making a long-term investment in their future by renting, and 72% worry that rent increases could affect their current and long-term finances. However, the Bank of America Institute finds that while housing supply has increased in response to population change, the supply of rental properties in some regions may not be sufficient to account for growing populations. Against this background, while 37% of respondents in the HBIR say renting is the better choice right now, they still plan to take steps towards buying a home in the near future

 

Emotional Value of Owning vs. Renting

In addition to the financial benefits of homeownership that renters fear they’re losing out on, there is emotional value to owning a home as well. For homeowners, 89% surveyed said the idea of owning a home brings emotional fulfillment rather than added stress. Additionally, 67% of prospective homebuyers would prefer to own a home for the sense of permanence and emotional stability it provides, rather than the flexibility of renting, and 58% of said that owning a home is the best long-term decision for them to have control over their own living space.

 

Lacking Confidence & Avoiding Mistakes

While higher interest rates and home prices make the rent vs. buy decision difficult, many prospective buyers feel that they lack the confidence needed to begin their homebuying journey. Whether it’s not feeling confident in their understanding of interest rates (41%) or how to finance or secure a mortgage (41%), prospective homebuyers don’t want to make a mistake. Many may also be overlooking valuable homebuyer resources available to them, with over half of prospective buyers (53%) not feeling confident in their understanding of homebuying grants.

Meeting with a lending specialist can help buyers boost their understanding of the homebuying process, and thus their confidence. A lending specialist can also help buyers understand if they qualify for assistance programs, such as down payment and closing cost grants available through Bank of America’s Community Homeownership Commitment™.

This material is provided for your convenience and information only. Bank of America assumes no liability for loss or damage as a result of your reliance on information in this publication. Our goal is for the content of this publication to be accurate as of the date this issue was printed. However, due to rapid changes occurring in the programs, products, and services offered within the home financing industry, we do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information presented.

 

Bank of America, N.A. Member FDIC.  Equal Housing Lender

© 2024 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved.

 

2023 Homebuyer Insights Report Materials

Learn more about how prospective homebuyers are navigating the mixed signals of the housing market.

Explore more

Three women viewing a computer screen

We’ve released our 2023 Ireland gender pay report

We are proud of our long-standing commitment to improve gender equality within our organization and in society as a whole.

California Voluntary Carbon Market Disclosures Act (VCMDA) Disclosures

The California Voluntary Carbon Market Disclosures Act requires businesses to disclose key information for selling voluntary carbon offsets (VCOs). View the disclosure.
a person working in a laboratory

Collaborating on the future of medicine

Learn how private sector investment supports the research and development driving healthcare innovation.
showing element 1 of 3