CalculatorNew Hampshire
Rent vs buy calculator — New Hampshire
New Hampshire investors often compare high-tax-adjacent demand with rural cash flow. Default rent inputs reflect HUD FMR data—property tax bills can surprise, so model from actual assessments when possible. Same math as the national Rent vs buy calculator; numbers are educational—not lender instructions.
Frequently asked questions
- How does this rent vs buy calculator find break-even?
- It compares cumulative renting cost to cumulative owning cost net of equity (principal paydown plus appreciation). Break-even is the first year owning costs less than renting.
- Does this include opportunity cost of the down payment?
- Yes. The rent path includes foregone investment returns by compounding the down payment at your chosen investment return assumption.
- Can I save rent vs buy scenarios?
- This calculator does not save your session. Use a free Veld account to save assumptions, compare scenarios, and track your property decisions over time.
- How should I evaluate rent vs buy in New Hampshire?
- Use local rent near about $1,700/month, purchase levels around $502,300 median home prices, and realistic mortgage assumptions. Break-even timing changes quickly when appreciation, rent growth, and opportunity cost assumptions shift.
Real estate investing in New Hampshire
Real estate investing in New Hampshire
Heating and roof maintenance matter in northern winters. Use expense lines aligned with building age and fuel type.
- Typical 2BR rent
- ~$1,700/mo
- Effective property tax
- ~1.35% of home value
- State income tax
- No state income tax
- Median home price
- ~$502,300
Rent: HUD FMR 2025 · Property tax: Tax Foundation 2022 · Adjust all calculator inputs to match your specific deal.
Other calculators for New Hampshire: BRRRR Calculator · STR vs LTR Calculator. All calculators · Investment property calculator