Houston Chronicle

Report reveals more regrets from renters than owners

- By Karen D’Souza

Homeowners­hip may be famed for its headaches, from bidding wars to get in the door to the constant drumbeat of repairs around the house, but renters don’t have it easy either. In fact, renters are the ones with more regrets, according to a recent Zillow Housing Aspiration­s Report.

One of their biggest regrets is being a renter in the first place. In the semiannual survey of 10,000 homeowners and renters in 20 of the country’s largest metro areas, 45 percent regret renting rather than buying, which is more than five times the share of homeowners (8 percent) who regret buying instead of renting.

Housing can also be an investment. The top regret for renters is not being able to build equity and not being able to customize or improve their rentals (52 percent), the report shows. After a while, feeling like your home doesn’t reflect your personalit­y can be a mood killer.

The next biggest regret is all about dollars and cents. Half of renters wish the rent wasn’t so steep. In a tight rental market, you can end up paying a lot of your income for rent.

Forty percent of renters also feel like their homes are too small, compared with 21 percent of homeowners, and 49 percent believe that they lack private outdoor space, compared with 25 percent of homeowners. Of course, renters also don’t have to fertilize the lawn, trim the trees and rake up the leaves.

In major cities, 87 percent of renters have at least one regret about their home, compared with 72 percent of homeowners.

The metro with the largest share of renters reporting at least one regret is Phoenix (93 percent), followed by San Francisco (92 percent) and San Jose, Calif., (91 percent).

The good news is that, like homeowners, renters tend to become less regretful with age. A whopping 90 percent of renters ages 18 to 34 have at least one regret about their rental, but that number slips to 82 percent by the 55 and up category.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Renters’ top regret was not being able to build equity and not being able to improve their rentals, the Zillow Housing Aspiration­s Report shows.
Associated Press file photo Renters’ top regret was not being able to build equity and not being able to improve their rentals, the Zillow Housing Aspiration­s Report shows.

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