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Buying vs. Renting in Southwest Florida: What Local Data Says About Homeownership in 2026
Southwest Florida Real Estate

Buying Can Still Beat Renting in Southwest Florida

But the Local Data Says the Story Is More Nuanced

Florida Realtors recently highlighted a national rent-versus-buy study showing that buying a home may outpace renting in several Florida markets over a 10-year period. The study, produced by AD Mortgage, compared projected homeowner equity against the outcome for renters who invested the down payment and any monthly savings instead of purchasing a home.

In several Florida cities, including Miami, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Orlando, and Jacksonville, the model favored buying over the full decade. That is an important message for consumers who may be focused only on monthly payment instead of the long-term wealth-building potential of homeownership.

But Southwest Florida is not a copy-and-paste version of Miami, Tampa, or Orlando.

Our market is more seasonal, more second-home oriented, more sensitive to insurance and HOA costs, and more varied by property type. For Coconut Coast members, the more useful message is not “buying always wins.” The stronger local message is this:

Buying can still create the better long-term outcome in Southwest Florida, but the case depends on time horizon, property type, carrying costs, and local market conditions.

That is where REALTORS® bring real value. Statewide and national headlines can start the conversation, but local data helps members guide buyers toward smarter decisions.

Buying vs. Renting: The Local Question Is Not “Which Is Cheaper Today?”
Question Why It Matters Locally
How long does the buyer plan to stay? The buy case improves over time through equity paydown and appreciation.
What type of property are they buying? Condo fees, HOA dues, insurance, and maintenance can change the math quickly.
Is the home priced correctly? Buyers are responding to well-positioned listings, not every listing.
Is the buyer financially ready? Ownership works best when the buyer has enough reserves for taxes, insurance, and repairs.
What submarket are they targeting? Bonita Springs, Estero, Naples, Fort Myers, Cape Coral, and Charlotte County do not all move the same way.
The rent-versus-buy decision in Southwest Florida is less about one monthly payment and more about the full cost of ownership, expected holding period, and local market timing.

Southwest Florida’s Spring Market Is Showing Real Absorption

The clearest local signal is that demand has not disappeared. In fact, April 2026 data shows buyers becoming more active across the region.

In Bonita Springs–Estero, closed sales rose 20% year over year, pending sales increased 39%, and new listings were down 17%. Listings sold totaled 431 compared with 404 new listings, while the median sale price came in at $553,750 and median days on market was 56.

That tells an important story. The market is not frozen. Buyers are engaging, but they are doing so selectively. Price, condition, location, and total monthly cost still matter.

Across the broader Coconut Coast Southwest Florida reporting area — Lee, Collier, and Hendry counties — pending sales rose 29.7%, closed sales increased 8.9%, inventory fell 15.1%, and the median sale price rose 7.0% to $380,309. At the same time, the region still carried nine months of supply.

That combination matters. We are seeing stronger absorption, but not a return to the urgency of 2021. Buyers still have choices, and sellers still need to price strategically.

April 2026: Buyers Are Back, But They Are Selective

Bonita Springs–Estero April 2026

Closed Sales+20% YoY
Pending Sales+39% YoY
New Listings404
Listings Sold431
Median Sale Price$553,750
Median Days on Market56 days
Homes for Sale-26% YoY

Coconut Coast SWFL (Lee, Collier & Hendry)

Pending Sales+29.7% YoY
Closed Sales+8.9% YoY
Inventory27,313 homes
Inventory Change-15.1% YoY
Median Sale Price$380,309
Median Price Change+7.0% YoY
Median Days on Market54 days
Months of Supply9 months
Bonita Springs-Estero: In Bonita Springs–Estero, listings sold outpaced new listings in April, showing that buyers are responding when homes are priced and positioned correctly.

Broader Region: The broader Southwest Florida market is tightening, but nine months of supply means buyers still have negotiating room in many segments.

How Southwest Florida Compares to Florida and the U.S.

A local rent-versus-buy article needs more than statewide conclusions. It needs comparison points.

Using a standardized county-based proxy for the broader Coconut Coast footprint — Lee, Collier, and Charlotte counties — the area shows a median sale price of roughly $435,065, average asking rent of about $2,152 per month, and an annualized gross rent-to-price ratio of approximately 5.94%.

That ratio is lower than Florida overall and lower than the national average. In plain English, local home prices are relatively high compared with rents. That does not mean buying is a bad decision. It means the reason to buy here is usually not instant monthly savings.

The local ownership case is more about long-term equity, lifestyle stability, future rent protection, and the value of owning in a high-demand coastal market.

The Local Buy Case Depends on the Long Game
Geography Median Sale Price Average Monthly Rent Annualized Gross Rent-to-Price Ratio Inventory Market Speed
Coconut Coast Proxy: Lee + Collier + Charlotte $435,065 $2,152 5.94% 25,244 67 days to pending
CCOR Southwest Florida: Lee + Collier + Hendry $380,309 ~$2,195 ~6.92% 27,313 54 median DOM
Florida $376,667 $2,395 7.63% 189,886 48 days to pending
United States $358,660 $1,930 6.46% 1,218,540 21 days to pending
Coconut Coast is more expensive than Florida and the U.S. overall, while its rent-to-price ratio is lower. That means the local ownership case depends more on holding period, equity growth, and total-cost planning than short-term payment savings.

Important note for publication: The Coconut Coast row is an inventory-weighted proxy using Lee, Collier, and Charlotte county Zillow data. The CCOR Southwest Florida row uses local April 2026 market reporting for Lee, Collier, and Hendry counties, with rent estimated from available regional rental proxies. These should be labeled as comparison figures, not official MLS statistics.

The Statewide Story Still Matters — But Members Should Localize It

The Florida Realtors article is useful because it helps shift the consumer conversation away from monthly payment alone. Many renters compare rent to mortgage payment and stop there. But homeownership builds equity over time. Rent does not.

However, Southwest Florida adds several local considerations that the statewide rent-versus-buy story does not fully capture.

  • First, our market has a heavy seasonal and second-home component. A buyer purchasing in Bonita Springs, Estero, Naples, Fort Myers Beach, or coastal Collier County may not be making the same decision as a first-time primary-residence buyer in a lower-cost inland market.
  • Second, insurance, taxes, condo fees, HOA dues, and maintenance can be major swing factors. A home that looks affordable on purchase price alone may look very different once the buyer accounts for the full monthly cost.
  • Third, local wages do not fully explain local demand. Southwest Florida continues to attract retirees, remote workers, equity-rich buyers, second-home shoppers, and lifestyle-driven relocations. That means demand can remain resilient even when local affordability looks strained.
  • Finally, market speed is different here than it is nationally. The U.S. market is moving faster overall, while Southwest Florida remains more balanced and more negotiable in many areas. That creates opportunities for prepared buyers, but it also means members need to help clients separate headline data from neighborhood-level reality.
5 Local Factors That Change the Buy-vs-Rent Math in Southwest Florida
Local Factor Why It Changes the Conversation
Seasonality Buyer activity often follows seasonal traffic, tourism, and second-home demand.
Insurance + HOA Costs Monthly ownership cost can vary significantly by property type and location.
Second-Home Demand Some buyers are driven by lifestyle, retirement planning, or long-term location preference.
Inventory Normalization Buyers have more choices than they did during the pandemic surge.
Selective Absorption Demand is strongest for homes that are priced, maintained, and marketed correctly.
Southwest Florida’s ownership story is not just about rent versus mortgage. It is about total cost, lifestyle demand, and whether the property fits the buyer’s long-term plan.

Why Time Horizon Is the Most Important Part of the Conversation

The longer a buyer owns, the more opportunity they have to benefit from equity paydown and future appreciation. That is why the AD Mortgage study uses a 10-year framework.

For many Southwest Florida buyers, that long-term lens matters. A renter may avoid insurance costs, maintenance, and transaction costs in the short run. But over time, they may also face rent increases without building equity.

A homeowner, by contrast, is paying down principal and participating in future market gains or losses. In a high-demand coastal region, that can be a meaningful long-term advantage — but only if the buyer can afford the full carrying cost and stay long enough for ownership to work.

That is the key member talking point: the buy-versus-rent decision should be modeled around time, not just today’s payment.

Buying Makes the Strongest Local Case When…
Buying Looks Stronger When… Renting May Still Make Sense When…
The buyer plans to stay 5–10+ years The buyer may move in 1–3 years
The buyer has cash reserves after closing The buyer would be stretched thin after purchase
The property has manageable insurance/HOA costs The property has unusually high carrying costs
The home is priced competitively The seller is still priced for 2021 conditions
The buyer wants stability and control The buyer needs flexibility
The buyer understands maintenance responsibilities The buyer wants fewer ownership obligations
Buying is most powerful when the buyer is financially ready, plans to hold long enough, and understands the full cost of the property.

A Better Conversation for Members to Have With Buyers

For REALTORS®, the opportunity is not to tell every renter that they should buy immediately. The opportunity is to guide consumers through a better decision-making process.

A strong buyer consultation should include:

  • A full monthly ownership estimate, including principal, interest, taxes, insurance, HOA or condo fees, utilities, and maintenance.
  • A realistic discussion of time horizon.
  • A review of inventory and days on market in the buyer’s target area.
  • A comparison of rent trends versus ownership costs.
  • A conversation about reserves after closing.
  • A review of property type, flood zone, insurance considerations, and association rules.

That is where local expertise matters. The answer may not be the same for a buyer looking at a single-family home in Estero, a condo in Naples, a waterfront property in Bonita Springs, or a more affordable home in inland Lee County.

How to Make the Buy-vs-Rent Conversation Local
Step What Members Should Review
1. Monthly Cost Mortgage, taxes, insurance, HOA, utilities, maintenance
2. Time Horizon How long the buyer realistically expects to own
3. Property Type Condo, villa, single-family, waterfront, new construction
4. Local Market Speed Days on market, pending sales, inventory, months of supply
5. Negotiation Room Price reductions, seller concessions, inspection flexibility
6. Lifestyle Fit Stability, location, schools, commute, seasonal use, retirement plans
7. Exit Strategy Resale demand, rental potential, future flexibility
The REALTOR® value is not in repeating a national headline. It is in translating that headline into a local decision framework.

Florida Home Values: A Five-Year Reset, Not a Crash

Another useful way to frame the conversation is to zoom out.

Florida home values rose significantly from 2021 to 2026, but the pace has cooled from the pandemic-era surge. According to Zillow/FRED data, Florida’s home value index rose from approximately $283,284 in March 2021 to $376,885 in March 2026 — an increase of roughly 33%.

That long-term increase helps explain why ownership remains powerful over time. But the more recent flattening also shows why buyers are more careful today. They are not rushing into every property. They are looking for value, negotiating when appropriate, and paying close attention to monthly cost.

That is a healthy message for members: the market has not collapsed, but it has become more disciplined.

Florida Home Values Rose Sharply — Then Stabilized
Source: Zillow/FRED data. *Florida’s five-year price growth shows why ownership can build long-term wealth, while recent stabilization shows why today’s buyers are more selective.*

What This Means for Sellers

The rent-versus-buy discussion also affects sellers. If more renters begin exploring ownership again, well-positioned listings can benefit from renewed buyer interest. But sellers should not assume demand automatically converts at any price.

The April data shows that buyers are active, but they are selective. Homes that are priced correctly, easy to show, well maintained, and marketed clearly are more likely to capture attention.

For members working with sellers, the message is straightforward: the ownership case is still strong, but buyers are doing the math. Sellers need to help that math make sense.

What This Means for Buyers

For buyers, the message is not to panic and not to wait forever. The current market offers more choice than the pandemic period, but the spring data shows that demand can return quickly when inventory tightens.

Buyers who are financially ready may have an opportunity to purchase before competition strengthens further in certain submarkets. But they should work closely with a REALTOR® to understand the full cost of ownership and compare options carefully.

The right question is not simply, “Should I buy or rent?”

The better question is: “What should I buy, where should I buy it, and how long do I plan to own it?”

Final Takeaway for Members

The statewide rent-versus-buy headline is useful, but the local version is stronger.

In Southwest Florida, buying can still beat renting over time, especially for financially prepared households with a longer time horizon. But the local data makes clear that this is not a one-size-fits-all message.

Our market has active demand, improving absorption, and long-term ownership appeal. It also has higher carrying costs, more property-type complexity, and more local variation than many national models can capture.

That is exactly why consumers need REALTORS®.

Members can use this conversation to move beyond headlines and provide real guidance: local data, total-cost analysis, neighborhood context, negotiation strategy, and long-term planning.

The ownership story is still powerful in Southwest Florida. It just needs to be told with local honesty.

“Buying can still be the stronger long-term move in Southwest Florida, but the local story is about time horizon, total cost, property type, and market timing — not just comparing rent to a mortgage payment.”
Sources:
Florida Realtors — “Study: Buying may outpace renting in Florida”
https://www.floridarealtors.org/news-media/news-articles/2026/05/study-buying-may-outpace-renting-florida

AD Mortgage — “The 10-Year Rent vs. Buy Wealth Study”
https://admortgage.com/wp-content/uploads/The-10-Year-Rent-vs-Buy-Wealth-Study-by-AD-Morgage.pdf

Coconut Coast Organization of REALTORS® — April 2026 Southwest Florida Real Estate Market Update
https://coconutcoastrealtors.org/april-2026-southwest-florida-real-estate-market-update-contracts-stay-strong-inventory-tightens/

Coconut Coast Organization of REALTORS® — April 2026 Fast Stats PDF
https://coconutcoastrealtors.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/BER_Fast_Stats-2.pdf

Coconut Coast Organization of REALTORS® — Bonita Springs–Estero April 2026 Infographic
https://coconutcoastrealtors.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Bonita-April-2026.png

Florida Realtors — April 2026 Florida Single-Family Market Data Detail
https://www.floridarealtors.org/sites/default/files/2026-05/April-2026-Fla-single-family-data-detail.pdf

Zillow — Lee County, FL Housing Market Data
https://www.zillow.com/home-values/80/lee-county-fl/

Zillow — Collier County, FL Housing Market Data
https://www.zillow.com/home-values/1638/collier-county-fl/

Zillow — Charlotte County, FL Housing Market Data
https://www.zillow.com/home-values/2650/charlotte-county-fl/

Zillow — Florida Housing Market Data
https://www.zillow.com/home-values/14/fl/

Zillow — United States Housing Market Data
https://www.zillow.com/home-values/102001/united-states/

Zillow Research — Rental Data and ZORI Methodology
https://www.zillow.com/research/data/
https://www.zillow.com/research/methodology-zori-repeat-rent-27092/

Freddie Mac — Primary Mortgage Market Survey
https://www.freddiemac.com/pmms

FRED / Zillow Home Value Index for Florida
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FLUCSFRCONDOSMSAMID

Coconut Coast Organization of REALTORS® — FGCU May 2026 Regional Economic Indicators Summary
https://coconutcoastrealtors.org/gcu-may-2026-regional-economic-indicators-tourism-resilience-vs-spending-and-labor-softening/

Florida Realtors — “Florida migration slows, but buyers still coming”
https://www.floridarealtors.org/news-media/news-articles/2026/05/florida-migration-slows-buyers-still-coming