Can I Actually Rent-to-Own a Home?

In today’s economy, there are many people who would like to become homeowners but lack the means to do so. For them, a rent-to-own arrangement can appear to be an attractive option. But how do these arrangements work and what are the potential shortcomings?

Though there are variations, the basic lease-with-option-to-buy arrangement works like this: a potential buyer signs a lease to rent a home they are interested in, with the lease typically running two or three years. During that time, the landlord/seller sets aside part of each month’s rent payment into an escrow account. When the lease is up, provided the payments have been made in a timely manner, the renter can use the money in the escrow account as a down payment to purchase the home outright.

In another variation, the owner may agree to sell the home to the renter at a discounted price, specified in the agreement, when the lease expires, rather than putting money into an escrow account.

“It’s a type of forced savings,” said Yael Ishakis, who sometimes handles rent-to-own agreements as part of her duties as a senior loan officer at First Meridian Mortgage in Brooklyn, N.Y. The author of The Complete Guide to Buying a Home, an e-book for potential buyers, she said that many people don’t realize how little difference there can be between rent and a mortgage payment.

Ishakis said she recently worked with a client who signed a lease in which they put $5,000 down and agreed to pay $1,800 a month in rent for two years. Of that, $600 a month went into an escrow account. The market rent on the property was actually about $1,600 a month, so the seller/landlord was actually kicking in $400 a month as part of the deal.

“The seller gives a little bit, she (the client) pays a little bit more,” Ishakis said.

By the end of the lease, she said, the client had $14,400 in the escrow, plus the $5,000 and another $10,000 they had saved on their own, for a nearly $30,000 down payment.

The downside of a rent-to-buy arrangement like this is that if you don’t end up buying the home, you lose the money you’ve built up in escrow. That could happen if you can’t qualify for a mortgage at the end of the lease, if you’ve simply changed your mind or if you’ve missed payments that voided the agreement.

Rent-to-buy arrangements are typically offered or accepted by motivated sellers, Ishakis said, those who are uncertain about being able to sell the home or who have had it on the market for awhile. Ishakis said she doesn’t see many such deals in a hot market like the New York City area, where demand is high and homes tend to sell fairly quickly. Given the choice, most owners would rather sell the home quickly and be done with it.