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Homeownership vs. Investing: A 50-Year Wealth Comparison

7/2/2026

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One of the common questions I hear from clients is:

"Should I buy a home or invest the money instead?"

Like many financial questions, the answer isn't as simple as choosing one over the other. It depends on your goals, your discipline, your lifestyle, and—perhaps most importantly—where you buy your home.
To illustrate this, I built a hypothetical 50-year comparison using one of the most successful housing markets in the country: Menlo Park, California.


The Scenario

Imagine two individuals beginning their financial journey in 1976. Both have identical incomes, the same savings, and the same opportunities.

  • Initial savings: $20,000
  • Home purchase price: $100,000
  • Mortgage: $80,000, 30-year fixed
  • Investment horizon: 50 years

​One chooses to purchase a home in Menlo Park. The other rents and invests using a diversified target-date portfolio that begins heavily invested in stocks and gradually becomes more conservative over time.


The Homeowner

Over five decades, Menlo Park became one of the most desirable communities in Silicon Valley. Fueled by the explosive growth of the technology sector, home values appreciated dramatically.

Our homeowner benefits from:
  • Long-term appreciation
  • Mortgage leverage
  • Tax advantages
  • Forced savings through mortgage payments
  • Housing stability
  • A fully paid-off home in retirement

Using reasonable historical assumptions, the home grows from approximately $100,000 to nearly $2.9 million.

After accounting for modest additional investments over the years, the homeowner's estimated net worth reaches approximately $3.4 million.


The Investor

Instead of purchasing a home, the investor rents and invests consistently.

Rather than using a static 60/40 portfolio, the analysis assumes a target-date approach:
  • Younger years: approximately 90% stocks
  • Mid-career: gradually increasing bond exposure
  • Retirement: approximately 50% stocks and 50% bonds

This mirrors how many professionally managed retirement funds are designed today.

Assuming disciplined investing over the full 50 years, the investment portfolio grows to approximately $5.5 million.
​
However, unlike the homeowner, the investor continues paying market rent throughout retirement.

After reserving enough assets to generate approximately $70,000 per year for future housing expenses, the investor's effective spendable wealth is estimated at approximately $3.75 million.


The Results

At first glance, the investor appears to finish ahead.
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But the comparison is much closer than many people expect.


Strategy                                                      Estimated Spendable Wealth

Menlo Park Homeowner                                      ~$3.4 million

Disciplined Target-Date Investor                          ~$3.75 million

The difference is surprisingly small considering that one strategy relied almost entirely on a single home while the other relied on a globally diversified investment portfolio.

​
The Bigger Lesson

The purpose of this comparison is not to declare a winner.

Instead, it highlights an important truth:

A home is not just an investment.

It is also:
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  • A place to live
  • A hedge against rising housing costs
  • A source of financial stability
  • A form of forced savings
  • A leveraged asset that most families could not otherwise access

Likewise, investing offers advantages that real estate cannot:
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  • Greater diversification
  • Daily liquidity
  • Lower concentration risk
  • Flexibility
  • Historically higher expected long-term returns across broad markets


A Critical Caveat

Menlo Park is an extraordinary example.

Few housing markets have experienced appreciation comparable to Silicon Valley over the past half century. Buying in Menlo Park in 1976 turned out to be an exceptional investment, but that outcome could not have been predicted with certainty at the time.

Likewise, not every investor maintains the discipline to consistently invest "the difference" month after month for decades. Many intend to do so but never follow through.


My Perspective

After reviewing the data, I don't believe this exercise proves that one strategy is universally superior.

Instead, it reinforces a principle I often share with clients:

Financial success rarely comes from choosing between homeownership and investing. It comes from thoughtfully combining both.

For many families, owning an appropriately priced home while consistently investing in a diversified portfolio provides the best balance of growth, stability, flexibility, and long-term financial security.
​
The objective isn't to maximize one asset. It's to build a resilient financial life capable of supporting your goals through every stage of life.


​Disclaimer: This analysis is hypothetical and intended for educational purposes only. It uses reasonable historical assumptions but does not represent actual investment performance or guarantee future results. Investment returns, housing appreciation, taxes, inflation, maintenance costs, and personal circumstances vary over time. Before making financial decisions, consult with a qualified financial professional regarding your specific situation.
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Must Read Financial Planning Questions - Estate Planning Questions

12/17/2014

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Estate Planning Questions

What is a probate? How does it affect my family or me if my parents' assets were going through probate? Do I or my parents need a trust? What type of trust(s) do I need? What's a revocable and irrevocable trust? Do I only need a will? Should I have my trust own some of my assets and not others? Does a successor ownership make more sense? Should I name my trust as the primary beneficiary or contingent beneficiary? What is a Trustee? A Guardian? An Executor? Power of Attorney? Healthcare Agents? Will I owe estate tax when I die? How about my parents? If so how will that be paid and when and who will pay for it? What happens to my special needs child? Do I need a special trust for that? I'm not a U.S citizen, does it make a difference when it comes to estate planning and estate tax? What if I don't want to give one of my kids anything? What are JWROS, CPWROS, TOD, JTIC, CP, JTIE, JTOD, etc and their effects on my beneficiaries? Who will make medical decisions for me when I cannot? What's Advance Care Directive? Why do I need to have a copy with me and why do I need to have quick access to it?


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Must Read Financial Planning Questions - Tax Planning Questions

11/24/2014

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Tax Planning Questions

Am I employed or self-employed? Should I file single or join tax returns? Does it make sense to form a corporation? If so what type of corporation should I form? Should I itemize my deductions? What are the new Medicare SurTax rules? Do I have to pay for this new tax? If so how do I manage it so I don't have to pay it? What's short term and long term capital gain tax? Which one am I paying? Why is my long term capital gain tax is over 20% where my friends are only paying 15%? How do I lower my long term capital gain tax? How is my social security and healthcare tax calculated? I'm a W2 person, how do I reduce my tax liabilities other than my mortgage interests and 401k contributions? Are there investments that can help me reduce my tax liabilities? I'm self-employed with a few employees, are there ways I can put much more money away other than having a SEP IRA, Simple IRA or 401k plan? How do I lower my tax bracket? Will tax eventually go up or down? What's the difference between long-term capital gain tax vs short-term capital gain tax? How do I go from STC to LTC and save on taxes? How will my charitable donations benefit me and others? Am I violating the gift tax rule? Do I need to pay tax when I'm dead? How do I manage that so my heirs will get the maximum assets I pass on to them? 


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