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Is Renting in São Paulo Really Cheaper Than Buying Right Now?

Sky-high property values and spiking interest rates are forcing many paulistanos to crunch the numbers—and for now, renting often costs less than a mortgage.

By São Paulo Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 1:38 am

3 min read

Is Renting in São Paulo Really Cheaper Than Buying Right Now?
Photo: Photo by Gabriel Schincariol Cavalcante on Pexels
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Renters in São Paulo are currently paying less month-to-month than buyers with new mortgages, a reversal from earlier years when homeownership offered clear long-term savings. The surge in property prices—particularly in neighborhoods like Itaim Bibi and Vila Madalena—combined with bank lending rates north of 11% mean even high-earning professionals are finding the math rarely stacks up in favor of buying.

The Squeeze of 2026

Housing affordability has shot to the top of city politics after São Paulo’s average sale price crested R$10,000 per square meter in May, according to the latest release from the Secovi-SP property association. Flip through listings along Avenida Brigadeiro Faria Lima, and it’s not uncommon to see two-bedroom apartments selling for north of R$1.5 million. At the same time, residential rents—though rising—haven’t kept up at the same breakneck speed. This divergence is a headache for would-be first-time buyers, especially as Companhia Paulista de Habitação Popular (Cohab-SP) has tightened eligibility for lower-income purchase programs, leaving more middle-class families stuck in the rental market.

“There’s a real sense of urgency,” said a leasing manager at a boutique agency in Pinheiros, reflecting on the spike in new rental inquiries. Many buyers who might once have targeted compact units around Praça Benedito Calixto are holding off, wary of locking in mortgages with double-digit interest rates. The story is similar in Mooca, where even modest new condos now command selling prices last seen only in Jardins or Higienópolis four years ago, according to digital platform Loft’s June market report.

The Numbers Don’t Lie

The economics are stark. A median 70m² apartment in Vila Madalena sells for nearly R$950,000. With a 20% down payment and Itaú’s current mortgage rates (around 11.2% per annum for a fixed-rate loan), the monthly installment exceeds R$8,300 over 30 years—before taxes and condo fees. Renting an equivalent flat on Rua Harmonia costs roughly R$5,300 per month, even after rent increases seen since the start of 2025. In many cases, renting is 30–40% cheaper per month after accounting for other ownership costs like IPTU property tax, which for some Jardins apartments now tops R$6,000 annually. Across the city, FipeZap’s May 2026 bulletin confirms the pattern: the rent/ownership ratio is at its widest since 2017, especially in premium and gentrifying districts.

“Families are doing the math and realizing it’s just not the year to buy,” said a local analyst who tracks the Mooca and Tatuapé micro-markets. Weighed against a sluggish overall economy and lingering inflation in food and utilities, the choice to rent instead of buy is as much about flexibility as cold calculation.

What Next for Paulistanos?

With the market poised for more interest rate hikes this quarter and Cohab-SP unlikely to unlock new incentives for buyers before 2027, experts predict demand for rentals along the Green Line metro corridor—especially in Pinheiros and Tatuapé—will remain high. Potential buyers should build cash reserves during the rental phase, keep tabs on mortgage offers from major banks like Bradesco and Santander, and watch for cooling signals in price-per-meter stats from Secovi-SP. For now, sticking with a rental, even with annual reajuste increases, looks like the safer bet for most São Paulo residents dreaming of ownership—but with eyes squarely on the numbers, not just the listings.

Topic:#Property

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This article was produced by the The Daily São Paulo editorial desk and covers property in São Paulo. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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