Quick answer
At current rates, renting wins over the full 30-year horizon in Anchorage. Monthly ownership cost $2,811 (vs $$1,500/mo rent) plus AK's 1.19% property tax make the math tough.
Rent vs Buy · AK
Rent vs Buy in Anchorage (2026)
Real math using AK's 1.19% property tax rate, $1,200/year average insurance, and a 6.8% 30-year fixed mortgage. Accounts for opportunity cost — what the down payment would earn invested at 7%.
Last updated: April 23, 2026
Verdict at current rates
Renting wins (30-year horizon)
In Anchorage at AK's tax rates and current 6.8% mortgages, keeping the down payment invested at 7% beats homeownership even after 30 years. The standard advice "buy to build equity" doesn't apply here at today's price-to-rent ratio.
Monthly Cost Breakdown
Buying
$2,811/mo
Mortgage P&I
$308,000 loan, 30yr @ 6.8%
$2,008
Property tax
1.19% of assessed (AK avg)
$382
Homeowners insurance
$1,200/yr AK avg
$100
Maintenance
1%/yr of home value
$321
Cash at close: ~$86,625 ($20% down + fees)
Renting
$1,500/mo
2BR rent (median)
Anchorage market rate
$1,500
Renters insurance
~$15/mo typical
$15
Down payment invested
$77,000 growing at 7%/yr
(opportunity cost)
Monthly gap: $1,311 cheaper than buying. Renter invests that difference.
Year-by-Year Net Position
"Buy wins by" = what you'd clear selling the home minus what the renter has in investments. Positive = buy ahead.
| Year | Home value | Buyer equity (net) | Renter portfolio (net) | Buy wins by |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 5 | $446,321 | $-118,913 | +$100,100 | $-219,014 |
| Year 10 | $517,408 | $-179,343 | +$147,642 | $-326,985 |
| Year 15 | $599,817 | $-217,382 | +$231,875 | $-449,257 |
| Year 30 | $934,496 | $-90,901 | +$921,068 | $-1,011,969 |
Assumptions
Every rent-vs-buy calculator depends on the assumptions. Here are ours — all transparent, none cherry-picked to bias the answer.
This is a rule-of-thumb calculator. Real decisions involve your specific tax bracket, any HOA, mortgage points, closing-cost negotiations, and exact loan terms.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it better to rent or buy in Anchorage?
In Anchorage at current mortgage rates (6.8%), renting and investing the down payment beats buying for the full 30-year horizon. Median monthly ownership costs ($2,811) well exceed median 2BR rent ($1,500), and AK's 1.19% property tax makes the math especially tough.
What's the monthly cost of owning a home in Anchorage?
On a median $385K home with 20% down at 6.8% fixed rate: mortgage P&I $2,008, property tax $382 (1.19% of assessed value), homeowners insurance $100 (AK average $1,200/year), and maintenance $321 (1% of home value/year). Total: $2,811/month.
How much down payment do I need to buy in Anchorage?
20% down on a median Anchorage home ($385K) is $77,000. Plus closing costs of roughly 2.5% ($9,625). Total cash-to-close: about $86,625. FHA loans allow 3.5% down ($13,475) but require mortgage insurance that adds ~$150/month.
What's the 10-year cost of renting vs buying in Anchorage?
Over 10 years in Anchorage: renters pay $206,350 in cumulative rent but have $353,992 invested (assuming 7% return on the $77,000 down payment + monthly savings). Buyers have paid $402,661 in total ownership costs and hold $254,362 in home equity. Net: renting is ahead by $326,985 at year 10.