Rent vs Buy in Pattaya: The Real Math
"Why pay a landlord when you could own?" It's the most common argument for buying — and it quietly ignores half the maths. Buying has costs renting doesn't, and renting frees up cash that can earn its own return. Whether buying wins comes down to one question more than any other: how long will you stay?
The two paths, fairly compared
Imagine you have enough cash to buy a condo outright. You can do one of two things with it:
- Buy. You spend the price plus buying costs. You pay running costs each year. At the end, you sell and pocket the value minus selling costs. Your wealth is that net sale figure, less what the running costs added up to.
- Rent. You keep the cash invested, earning a return. You pay rent each year. Your wealth is the invested pot, less the rent you paid.
Track both year by year and the higher number wins. The year buying overtakes renting is your break-even.
The numbers that move the answer
Three inputs dominate everything else:
- Years you'll stay. Buying carries roughly 5–7% costs in and 4–8% out. Spread over two years that's brutal; over fifteen it's trivial.
- Price growth. Modest, steady appreciation tilts toward buying. Flat or falling prices tilt hard toward renting.
- Opportunity cost. If your cash could earn a healthy return invested elsewhere, renting and investing becomes more attractive — this is the factor buyers most often forget.
A useful gut check: if you're not confident you'll keep the place for at least five years, renting is usually the lower-risk choice in Pattaya.
Pattaya-specific wrinkles
Two local realities matter. First, the 5-year Specific Business Tax: sell within five years of buying and you'll pay an extra 3.3% on exit, which pushes break-even further out for short holds. Second, liquidity: Pattaya's resale market can be slow, so "I'll just sell if plans change" is not a reliable escape hatch. Renting keeps you nimble; buying ties you down.
When buying genuinely wins
Buying tends to come out ahead when you'll stay many years, you expect steady price growth, rents are high relative to the purchase price, and you don't have a high-return alternative use for the cash. It also wins on the things a spreadsheet can't price: stability, the freedom to renovate, and not depending on a landlord.
Find your personal break-even
Enter a price, an equivalent rent and your time horizon — the tool models both paths year by year and tells you who comes out ahead, and when.
Open the Rent vs Buy calculatorThere's no universal answer — only your answer, for your stay length and assumptions. Model it with the Rent vs Buy calculator, and if you're leaning toward buying as an investment, sanity-check the rental yield too.