It is not which is universally better. It is which builds wealth faster for you, and by when, decided mostly by two levers: your time horizon, and whether you can service investment debt.
By the Chase Wealth Australia advisory team · 13 July 2026
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There is no universal winner between rentvesting and buying your first home, and anyone who tells you otherwise is selling one of them. Both build wealth. They just build it through different engines, on different timelines, with a different set of costs attached, so the honest question is not which is better in the abstract but which builds wealth faster for you, and by when. That answer turns mostly on two levers: your time horizon, and whether you can service investment debt. Get those two straight and the decision largely makes itself.
This guide compares the two roads head to head, using real Queensland and Western Australia numbers rather than an abstract “it depends”, and it states the case for buying a first home as strongly as the case for rentvesting, because a comparison that leans one way is only a pitch in disguise. It is the decision itself, the step before you either save for a home or put a deposit to work, so it assumes no prior choice and argues both sides on their merits.
Start with the framing, because the wrong framing produces the wrong answer. Buying a first home to live in and rentvesting are not lifestyle versus greed; they are two different ways to turn income into wealth. Buying a home builds wealth by forcing you to save, since the mortgage is a savings plan you cannot skip, and by letting your own home grow in value with that growth generally free of capital gains tax when you sell. Rentvesting builds wealth by separating where you live from where you invest, so you can rent in the suburb you actually want and put your money into a market chosen purely on the numbers. Both work. Which one builds wealth faster for you comes down to how long you will hold, and whether a lender will let you service investment debt on top of your rent.
In one line, rentvesting means renting the home you live in while owning an investment property somewhere the numbers stack up better, so lifestyle and investment stop competing for the same dollar. That is the whole concept, and if it is new to you, start with our explainer on what rentvesting is and who it suits before you weigh it against buying. From here on, this guide assumes you know what it is and want to decide whether to do it.
That split is one road to wealth. Buying a first home to live in is the other. The rest of this guide puts them side by side and refuses to flatter either one.
Here is the even-handed version, before we get into where each one wins. Buying your first home builds wealth through two quiet mechanisms: forced saving, because every repayment chips away at the loan whether you feel like saving that month or not, and capital growth on an asset you happen to also live in, which in Australia is generally free of capital gains tax when you sell. The cost is that you buy where you can afford to live, which is rarely where growth is strongest. Rentvesting builds wealth the other way: you choose the growth market on its merits, and let rent and tax deductions carry a large share of the holding cost, while you rent where you actually want to be. Its cost is the mirror image: the gain is taxable when you sell, you forgo the grants and concessions a first-home buyer can claim, and you carry a tenant’s lease and a landlord’s responsibilities at the same time.
The fork makes the symmetry clear, and it is the honest starting point: neither road is a free lunch, and each edge comes with a matching cost. Which one pulls ahead depends on the two levers underneath, so the next two sections take each side’s genuine strengths in turn, buying first.
The case for buying your first home is stronger than the rentvesting crowd tends to admit, and it rests on four real advantages. Take them at full strength.
First, the tax treatment of your own home is hard to beat. As a category, an owner-occupied home is generally exempt from capital gains tax when you sell it, whereas an investment property is not: its gain is assessable, and its rent is taxable income along the way. Over a long hold, paying no tax on the growth of the place you live is a genuine structural edge, and it is the single biggest advantage the pro-rentvesting pitch quietly leaves out. How much it is worth depends entirely on your own situation and your accountant, which is exactly why we are not putting a figure on it.
Second, first-home buyers can access grants and stamp-duty concessions that an investor cannot. A rentvestor buying an investment property pays the full investor rate of transfer duty with no owner-occupier or first-home concession, and forgoes any first-home owner grant. Those concessions are real money left on the table by choosing to rentvest, and their value depends on the state, the price and the scheme in force when you buy, so treat them as a genuine cost of the rentvesting road even though they never appear in the purchase price.
Third, a mortgage is forced saving. Renting only works as a wealth strategy if you genuinely invest the difference, and plenty of people rent and simply spend it. A home loan removes the discipline problem, because the repayment is not optional. For a saver who knows they would not otherwise invest consistently, that alone can make buying the wealthier road, whatever a spreadsheet says about the theoretical rentvesting return.
Fourth, security. You cannot be given notice on a home you own, you can renovate it to suit you, and you are not exposed to a rising rental market for the roof over your head. For a household that values stability, that is worth more than a comparison table can show. And over a long enough horizon, owning the place you live tends to pull ahead on the numbers too, because the forced saving and the tax-free growth compound while the rent you would otherwise have paid disappears. The longer you will stay put, the more the buy-a-home road works in your favour.
Now the other side, stated just as plainly. Rentvesting wins wherever the home you would want to buy and the home that makes a good investment are two different properties, which in Australia’s expensive cities is most of the time.
The core advantage is choice. When you rent where you live, you are free to buy purely on the numbers, in a market with the entry price, rental demand and growth case that actually stack up, rather than being forced to compromise the investment so it also suits your commute and your lifestyle. A lifestyle suburb close to the city can cost well over a million dollars to buy into, while a growth-corridor house in Queensland or Western Australia sits far lower and still carries a real growth case behind it. Renting the first and owning the second lets you stop paying a lifestyle premium on the asset that is meant to be building your wealth.
The second advantage is flexibility, and it matters more than it looks. A renter can move for a job, a relationship or a school in weeks, without agent’s fees, transfer duty and the friction of selling. For anyone whose life is not yet settled, or who is self-employed and wants to keep options open, that mobility has real value, and buying a first home quietly takes it away for years.
The third is that rentvesting gets you invested sooner. Instead of waiting to afford a home in the suburb you want, you can own an appreciating asset now, in a market you could actually afford, and let time in the market do its work while you rent where you want to be. For the full picture of who the approach suits and who it does not, our explainer covers what rentvesting is and who it suits in detail.
Abstractions are easy to argue with, so here is the comparison in real numbers. The gap the whole decision turns on is the price of where you would live versus the price of where you would invest. Brisbane’s own median dwelling is now above $1.1 million and Perth’s is around $1.05 million (Cotality, May 2026), which is roughly what buying a home to live in near either city costs. The growth corridors where investors actually buy sit well below that, with entry-level median houses in the high $600,000s to low $700,000s. That is the side-by-side in a sentence: buy where you want to live and you fund the city median; rentvest and you fund a corridor house while you rent where you want. Here is where those corridor medians sit today, each with its source and window named.
| Corridor (suburb) | Median house | Gross yield (approx) | Source (window) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ipswich, SE QLD | ~$690,000 to $710,000 | ~3.5 to 4% | CoreLogic-based aggregators, year to mid-2026 |
| Armadale, Perth | $680,000 | ~4.5 to 5% | REIWA, year to June 2026 |
| Midland, Perth | $690,000 | ~4.5 to 5% | REIWA, year to June 2026 |
| Mandurah, Perth | $675,000 | ~4 to 4.5% | REIWA, year to June 2026 |
| Rockingham, Perth | $705,000 | ~4 to 4.5% | REIWA, year to May 2026 |
Two honest caveats on that table. These are suburb medians, not council-area averages, which read higher because they blend in pricier suburbs, so the suburb figure is the one that matters to an investor. And the double-digit growth many of these corridors posted over the past year is a cyclical run off a low base, not a rate to assume continues, so lean on the corridor logic rather than last year’s growth line.
The costs line up differently on each road, and this is where the buy side claws some back. On a $650,000 purchase, an investor pays the full rate of transfer duty with no concession: about $22,275 in Queensland and $24,890 in Western Australia (2026 state scales). A first-home buyer, by contrast, may access duty concessions and grants that a rentvestor forgoes entirely, a genuine cost of choosing to rentvest even though it does not show up in the sticker price. On the deposit, if you already own a home the relevant question is how far your equity stretches: at a full 20 per cent deposit about $140,000 of usable equity reaches entry-pocket stock rather than a corridor median, while a corridor median needs either a smaller deposit with lenders mortgage insurance or closer to $210,000 in equity. To put your own figure against these prices, work out your usable equity in the calculator. Because the right suburb inside a corridor is not the corridor average, our Brisbane advisors work these corridors across Ipswich and Logan, and our Perth advisors do the same across Armadale, Midland and Mandurah. Whichever road you take, the investment purchase itself follows the same path, and our guides cover the full step-by-step of buying an investment property and how much deposit you actually need.
Enter your home’s value and loan balance to see your usable equity and the purchase range it reaches in the corridors above.
Open the Equity Unlock CalculatorTax deserves its own section, because it is the lever the pro-rentvesting pitch most often skips, and it genuinely swings the decision. Handled at the category level rather than as advice for your situation, two facts matter.
The first is the main-residence exemption. As a rule, an owner-occupied home is generally exempt from capital gains tax when you sell it, while an investment property is not: the gain on an investment is assessable, and the rent it earns is taxable income while you hold it. For someone buying a first home and staying a long time, that exemption is a real and recurring advantage. For a rentvestor, capital gains tax on the eventual sale is a real and recurring cost. Neither settles the decision on its own, but leaving the exemption out of the comparison, as a lot of rentvesting content does, quietly tilts the maths toward renting and investing.
The second is that the settings are changing. Under the FY27 reforms, negative gearing is being kept for new builds from 1 July 2027, while rental losses on established investment properties bought after 12 May 2026 are quarantined, meaning they carry forward against future property income rather than reducing salary tax. Capital gains tax discount settings also change from 1 July 2027. The practical read for anyone weighing the two roads is generic: the tax treatment of a new build now differs from that of an established property, and which of them suits, and how any of it applies to you, depends on your own position and your accountant. It belongs in the plan, not in a rule of thumb, which is why the sensible next step for the tax side of this decision is a conversation with your accountant alongside a strategy session, not a number pulled off a blog.
Everything so far has framed this as a first-home decision, but a large share of the people asking the rentvesting-versus-buying question already own a home. If that is you, the question quietly changes shape. It is no longer rent versus buy a first home; it is buy the next home to live in versus rentvest with the equity you already hold. The first-home grants and concessions are off the table either way, so the comparison narrows to growth, tax and serviceability, and the equity sitting in your current home becomes the deposit.
The numbers here are more concrete, because your equity is a known quantity. About $140,000 of usable equity reaches entry-pocket stock at a full 20 per cent deposit, or a corridor median house with a smaller deposit plus lenders mortgage insurance; about $210,000 reaches a corridor median at a full 20 per cent deposit with room to spare. The mechanics of releasing that equity, the split-loan structure and how the interest is treated, are covered in our guide to how your home equity can fund the deposit, and you can see your own number rather than the worked example when you work out your usable equity in the calculator.
If you land on rentvesting from here, this post has done its job, and the next step is execution rather than decision. Our guide to the equity-funded rentvesting strategy picks up exactly there: which corridor, what loan structure, and how to recycle equity into a second property without stalling at the serviceability wall.
So which is it? The honest answer is that there is no universal answer, which is the whole reason this comparison runs on your numbers rather than a verdict. Use the framework, not a rule.
Choose on time horizon first. The longer you will hold, the more the buy-a-home advantages compound: forced saving, tax-free growth on your own home and security all reward staying put, so a long, settled horizon leans toward buying. A shorter or less certain horizon, where flexibility and getting invested sooner matter more, leans toward rentvesting.
Then test serviceability, because it can override the preference. Rentvesting only works if a lender will let you carry investment debt on top of your rent, and equity does not guarantee that: lenders assess every new loan at your rate plus a regulatory buffer, so the strategy can be right on paper and still be capped by what you can service. If that gate is tight, buying a first home to live in may simply be the more achievable road.
Then decide what you are optimising for: pure wealth, lifestyle, or security. Rentvesting tends to win on wealth and lifestyle for those who will genuinely invest the difference; buying tends to win on security and for savers who need the discipline of a mortgage. There is no score to settle here, only a fit to find. The way to find it is to run your own figures, so work out your usable equity, then bring the result to a strategy session and decide against real corridor stock and live lending conditions. If you have already decided rentvesting is your road, our guide to the equity-funded rentvesting strategy is the execution plan.
A strategy session runs both roads against your equity, income and goals, and shows what each could mean in Brisbane or Perth. Bring your calculator result and we will pressure-test the decision against live lending conditions.
Book a strategy sessionThe figures in this guide are general information; a strategy session is where they become yours.