Rent vs Buy Apartment — What's More Profitable in 2026?

Rent or buy? Financial analysis, cost calculator, arguments for and against. Check which option is better for your life and financial situation.

11 min czytania

The Most Important Financial Decision in Life?

Buying an apartment is the largest transaction in life for most Poles. At the same time, it's a decision surrounded by emotions, social pressure, and myths. "Renting is throwing money away" — you hear this from family, friends, and real estate agents. But is it true?

The answer is complex and depends on your specific situation. Let's analyze both options with hard numbers.

Purchase Costs — Full Picture

Buying an apartment isn't just about the price per square meter. Real costs include:

Initial Costs

  • Down payment: minimum 10–20% of property value (e.g., 60,000–120,000 PLN for an apartment worth 600,000 PLN)
  • Broker commission: 2–3% (12,000–18,000 PLN)
  • Notary: 2,000–5,000 PLN
  • PCC tax (secondary market): 2% of price (12,000 PLN)
  • Property valuation: 500–1,000 PLN
  • Renovation/finishing: 30,000–100,000 PLN

Loan Costs (at 80% LTV, 25 years, WIBOR + margin)

For a 480,000 PLN loan (apartment for 600,000 PLN, down payment 120,000 PLN):

  • Monthly payment: approx. 3,200–3,800 PLN (at 6–7% rate)
  • Total interest cost: approx. 500,000–650,000 PLN over 25 years
  • Total repayment amount: approx. 980,000–1,130,000 PLN

Ongoing Costs (owner)

  • Administrative fee: 400–800 PLN/month
  • Property tax: 50–200 PLN/year
  • Insurance: 300–600 PLN/year
  • Repairs and maintenance: 1–2% of property value annually (6,000–12,000 PLN)
  • Renovation fund: included in administrative fee

Rental Costs — Full Picture

Ongoing Costs (tenant)

  • Rental fee: 2,500–4,000 PLN/month (depending on location and standard)
  • Utilities: 300–600 PLN/month (electricity, gas, internet)
  • Tenant liability insurance: 100–200 PLN/year

What Do You Do with the Difference?

This is the key question. If the loan payment is 3,500 PLN and rent costs 2,800 PLN — you have 700 PLN monthly difference. Plus the down payment (120,000 PLN) that isn't frozen in real estate.

If you invest this difference — rental can be financially better. If you spend it — buying forces saving discipline.

Simulation: Buy vs Rent + Investing

Assumptions

  • Apartment: 600,000 PLN
  • Down payment: 120,000 PLN
  • Loan: 480,000 PLN, 25 years, 6.5% interest rate
  • Rental fee: 2,800 PLN/month (3% annual growth)
  • Property value growth: 3% annually
  • Investment return rate: 7% annually

BUY Scenario (after 25 years)

  • Property value: ~1,250,000 PLN
  • Total costs (loan + maintenance): ~1,600,000 PLN
  • Net wealth from real estate: ~1,250,000 PLN

RENT + INVEST Scenario (after 25 years)

  • Down payment invested (120,000 PLN × 25 years × 7%): ~650,000 PLN
  • Invested difference (700 PLN/month × 25 years × 7%): ~530,000 PLN
  • Net wealth from investments: ~1,180,000 PLN

Result: In this scenario, buying wins slightly, but the difference is minimal. Changing one parameter (higher investment returns, lower property price growth, higher interest rate) can reverse the result.

Arguments for Buying

1. Forced Saving

Loan payments are forced saving. Even if you're not disciplined — the bank ensures you "save" in the form of principal repayment.

2. Housing Stability

You're in your own place. No one will terminate your contract, raise rent by 30%, or forbid painting walls.

3. Financial Leverage

You buy a property for 600,000 PLN by putting down 120,000 PLN. If value increases by 10% (60,000 PLN), your return on invested capital is 50%. That's the power of leverage.

4. Inflation Protection

Real estate historically protects against inflation — their value grows along with prices.

Arguments for Renting

1. Flexibility

You can change apartments, cities, countries — without selling property and transaction costs.

2. No Risk of Value Decline

The real estate market doesn't only grow. Local price drops (e.g., after development boom) can freeze your capital for years.

3. Lower Entry Threshold

You don't need 120,000 PLN down payment. You can start investing immediately.

4. No Hidden Costs

Pipe burst? Boiler broke? The owner's problem, not yours.

5. Capital Liquidity

120,000 PLN in an ETF fund can be withdrawn in 2 days. 120,000 PLN frozen in real estate — selling takes months.

When Does Buying Pay Off More?

  • You plan to live in the same place for 10+ years
  • Loan interest rate is low (below 5%)
  • Rental prices in your location are high relative to purchase prices (price-to-rent ratio below 15)
  • You're not disciplined at saving — loan payments force regularity
  • You value stability and certainty of housing

When Does Renting Pay Off More?

  • You don't know where you'll be in 3–5 years (job change, city, country)
  • Loan interest rate is high (above 7%)
  • Purchase price to annual rent ratio is high (above 20)
  • You're disciplined and invest the difference
  • You don't want to freeze capital and prefer liquidity

Price-to-Rent Ratio — How to Calculate?

Divide apartment price by annual rental fee:

Price-to-rent = Apartment price / (Rent × 12)

  • Below 15: buying is attractive
  • 15–20: both options comparable
  • Above 20: rental is financially advantageous

Example: apartment for 600,000 PLN, rent 3,000 PLN/month.

  • 600,000 / (3,000 × 12) = 16.7 — neutral zone

In major Polish cities (Warsaw, Kraków, Wrocław) this ratio in 2026 oscillates around 18–25, suggesting that rental is often more financially rational.

Summary

There's no universal answer. Buying and renting are two strategies with different risk and return profiles. Key variables are:

  • Your time horizon
  • Loan interest rate
  • Local property prices vs rents
  • Your investment discipline
  • Your life situation (stability, plans)

The worst decision is one made under pressure ("because everyone buys") or from ignorance ("because rent is throwing money away").

How Freenance Can Help

Regardless of whether you pay loan installments or rent — Freenance helps track the full cost of housing in the context of your entire budget. You see what percentage of income housing consumes and how much remains for savings and investments.

Make housing decisions based on data. Try Freenance for free →

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