Baylor Scott & White Temple · Incoming Residents & Fellows · 2026
You matched at BSW Temple. You have roughly 90 days before July 1 and a housing decision to make. The honest answer to rent or buy depends on two numbers: how long you’re staying, and whether you’re using a physician loan. Here’s the math.
Lean toward renting if…
Your timeline is 3 years or under
3-year residency, no fellowship planned
Uncertain about staying in Temple after training
No physician loan access or limited credit history
High student loan debt with standard DTI underwriting
Prioritizing flexibility over equity building
Lean toward buying if…
Your timeline is 5+ years
Staying through fellowship (5–7 year total)
Likely to become an attending at BSW Temple
Eligible for a physician loan (0% down, no PMI)
Student loans on IBR — qualifying under physician loan underwriting
Want school district access for children (Belton ISD)
The reason the timeline matters so much is transaction costs. Buying and selling a home in Texas costs roughly 8–10% of the purchase price in total friction — agent commissions, closing costs, title fees. On a $270,000 home, that’s $21,600–$27,000 in round-trip costs that equity gains need to overcome before you net positive. At 2–3% annual appreciation, that takes 4–5 years.
A physician loan addresses the two biggest obstacles that prevent residents from buying: no down payment saved, and student loan debt killing the DTI ratio. Here’s what it changes specifically:
| Feature | Conventional Loan | Physician Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment | 3–20% required | 0% available |
| PMI | Required under 20% down | Waived |
| Student loan DTI | Full payment counted | IBR payment or excluded |
| Employment start date | Must be employed | Offer letter accepted |
| Credit score minimum | 620+ typical | 700+ typical |
| Loan limit | $806,500 conforming | Often $1M–$1.5M |
On a $270,000 Temple home, a physician loan saves approximately $27,000 in down payment and $162/month in PMI compared to a conventional loan at 10% down. That changes the monthly cost comparison materially — and it changes the breakeven timeline because you’re not depleting savings that could otherwise compound in the market.
Local Physician Loan Lenders
Several regional and national lenders offer physician loan programs to BSW residents specifically — including Truist, Regions Bank, and physician-specialty lenders like Laurel Road and Fifth Third. Ask any lender you speak with whether they have a physician or medical professional program before assuming you need a standard conventional loan. I can refer you to lenders in Temple who’ve worked with BSW residents before.
A standard residency at BSW Temple is 3 years. Here’s the financial picture for a buyer who purchases at the start of residency and sells at the end:
| 3-Year Scenario | Buy (Physician Loan) | Rent |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly housing cost (yr 1) | $2,510 | $1,750 |
| Total paid over 3 years | $90,360 | $64,050* |
| Equity built (principal paydown) | ~$12,400 | $0 |
| Appreciation gain (3% annually) | ~$25,100 | $0 |
| Selling costs at exit (9%) | -$26,700 | $0 |
| Net financial position vs. renting | -$42,600 vs. renter | $0 |
*Rent estimated at 3% annual escalation over 3 years. Renter assumed to invest $27,000 down payment equivalent at 6% return = ~$32,200. Net renter position vs. buyer: ~+$42,600 at 3-year exit. Buying improves if appreciation exceeds 3% or if physician loan down payment is $0 (no opportunity cost on invested capital).
The 3-year verdict is clear: renting wins financially if you plan to sell when you leave. The gap is real and transaction costs are the primary driver. This isn’t a close call — it’s the reason most financial advisors tell residents to rent during training.
Extend the timeline to 5–7 years and the math reverses. Transaction costs become a smaller percentage of total equity built, rent escalation compounds against renters, and the homestead exemption produces real savings.
| 5-Year Scenario | Buy (Physician Loan) | Rent + Invest |
|---|---|---|
| Total housing paid | $150,600 | $113,050* |
| Equity built (principal) | ~$22,100 | $0 |
| Appreciation (3%/yr, 5 yrs) | ~$44,700 | $0 |
| Homestead exemption savings | ~$7,980 ($133/mo × 60) | $0 |
| Selling costs at exit (9%) | -$28,200 | $0 |
| Invested down payment (renter, 6%) | $0 | +$36,100 |
| Net position vs. renting | +$8,130 buyer advantage | $0 |
Rent escalated at 3% annually from $1,750. Physician loan assumed ($0 down, so no invested capital for renter’s opportunity cost in buy scenario). Appreciation at 3% annually on $270K home. Homestead exemption savings at Temple ISD rate ($133/mo). At 7 years the buyer advantage grows to ~$28,000.
At 5 years the buyer has a modest edge. At 7 years — when a 3-year residency plus a 4-year fellowship is complete and a resident becomes an attending at BSW — buying is clearly the better financial outcome. If you’re staying at BSW long-term, buy. If you’re definitely leaving after residency, rent.
BSW Medical Center sits on the north side of Temple. Most residents want a 10–15 minute commute and a neighborhood that will hold value. Here are the relevant options at different price points:
| Neighborhood / Area | Price Range | Commute to BSW | School District | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lake Pointe | $280K–$380K | 12–15 min | Belton ISD | Best school/tax arbitrage in Bell County |
| North Temple (near BSW) | $220K–$290K | 5–10 min | Temple ISD | Closest proximity; older stock |
| Wyndham Hill | $290K–$420K | 18–22 min | Belton ISD | Newer construction; growing community |
| Harker Heights | $250K–$350K | 25–30 min | Killeen ISD | Lower tax rate; longer commute |
| Central Belton | $270K–$360K | 20–25 min | Belton ISD | Historic downtown; strong resale demand |
Lake Pointe — The Underpriced Option
Lake Pointe is zoned Belton ISD but sits within Temple city limits — meaning you pay Temple’s lower city tax rate while accessing Belton ISD schools. Homes run $280K–$380K. For residents with families, this is the single most favorable combination of school quality, commute time, and tax rate in Bell County. It sells quickly when correctly priced — get a pre-approval in place before you look here.
If you matched in March and start July 1, here’s the realistic decision window:
The decision window is shorter than it feels. If buying, you need to start the pre-approval process within 2 weeks of Match Day to have any chance of closing before July 1. If renting, you have more time but quality 3BR rentals near BSW move fast in spring.
Contact a physician loan lender with your match letter and loan documents. Physician loan lenders accept offer letters in lieu of pay stubs — this is critical for residents who don’t have a first paycheck yet. Get pre-approved before you look at a single house.
In the current Temple market (homes selling in 103 days on average, per Redfin Feb 2026), you have time to be selective. Don’t panic-buy. A well-priced 3BR near BSW should be available in your range. Make an offer with a 30–45 day closing window.
Physician loans sometimes take longer to process than conventional loans — budget 45 days from contract to close. Request a 45-day closing window in your offer. File your homestead exemption with Bell County Appraisal District immediately after closing.
Target closing 1–2 weeks before your start date. Moving during the last week of June when every other new resident is also moving is chaotic — build in buffer time. File homestead exemption within 30 days of closing.
The calculator is pre-loaded with Temple ISD tax rates and current insurance costs. Adjust to your specific price range and physician loan terms — set down payment to 0% if using a physician loan, and toggle the time horizon to 3 vs. 5 years to see the breakeven shift.
I work with BSW residents every Match season. I know which neighborhoods make sense at which price points, which physician loan lenders close on time, and how to structure an offer that gets accepted without overpaying. A 15-minute call before you start touring saves weeks of wasted time.