Hrm. Perhaps. I'm looking at things like:
thisand
thisThese articles only seem to focus on average (which is skewed by high-cost areas), and they talk about the monthly cost today without talking about how home purchase prices are fixed while rents will likely inevitably increase. They also don't even mention that you can deduct mortgage interest from taxes but you can't for rent. Even with the silly Trump-era SALT limit of $10k, that will be worth around $150/month in tax reduction (at the 18% tax bracket). Fix your I-9 and get that money back every month.
Event
this one makes it sound like buying is worse than renting.
I feel like these articles are stating truths (on average it costs more today in monthly payment terms to buy than rent) but it is talking only about present monthly payments, not total future discounted cost. The headlines seem to fall into the trap of "monthly payments are all that matters" instead of considering other factors. (Note: I totally agree that if you can't afford a house payment, then don't over-extend to do it!)
I dunno I guess I don't see the situation as pessimistic as the mass media; probably because optimism doesn't sell...
EDIT: what do you mean payments start to balloon - once you buy a house,
the price you pay per month stays constant until you refinance or move. Yes payments are higher at 8% than they were at 3%. And house prices are high because *gasp* people are paying those prices, even at high interest rates! So clearly people
were willing to pay inflated prices.
The *only* time renting is better long-term financially than buying is if rent increases are less than inflation and you are investing the money you aren't spending on a higher-cost mortgage in something that makes returns higher than the rate of inflation (and higher than the rate of appreciation of a house, had you bought it).
Note I'm making a distinction between long-term and short-term; yes going house-poor is not wise. But if you can buy a house -
any house pretty much - you are historically better off. About the only time that doesn't work if you get unlucky and are trying to sell a house during a recession or other period when there is a glut of housing supply.