Rent Vs Buy Temple TX 2026

Rent vs. Buy in Temple TX (2026): The Real Bell County Math

Bell County, TX — Temple · Belton · Killeen · Harker Heights

Rent vs. Buy in Temple TX:
The Real Bell County Math (2026)

By Moody Glasgow, REALTOR® · Updated June 2026 · TREC License #795158

Most rent vs. buy calculators use a national average property tax of 1.1% and $1,800/year for insurance. Bell County’s actual numbers are roughly double both. That difference alone changes your monthly cost by $400–$600 — enough to flip the entire verdict. Here’s what the real math looks like.

The Bottom Line Upfront

In Temple, TX in mid-2026: renting is cheaper month-to-month in year one. Buying builds more wealth if you stay 4–6 years or longer. That breakeven point is earlier than most people expect — and later than most agents will tell you.

The key numbers driving this answer aren’t the mortgage rate or the home price. They’re the two costs that national rent-vs-buy tools consistently underestimate for Bell County: property taxes and homeowners insurance. Get those wrong and the entire analysis is off.

2.35%
Blended property tax rate — Temple homeowners (Temple ISD)
$3,400+
Average annual homeowners insurance — Central Texas hail corridor
$255K
Median home price — Temple TX, Zillow April 2026

Why National Calculators Give Bell County the Wrong Answer

Run the Zillow or NerdWallet rent vs. buy calculator for Temple, TX and you’ll get an answer based on something like 1.1% property tax and $150/month for insurance. Those are national medians. They bear no resemblance to Bell County reality.

Here’s the actual gap between what a national tool assumes and what a Temple homeowner pays:

Cost Item National Average Bell County Actual Monthly Difference
Property tax (on $255K home) $234/mo (1.1%) $499/mo (2.35%) +$265/mo
Homeowners insurance $150/mo ($1,800/yr) $283/mo ($3,400/yr) +$133/mo
Total underestimate +$398/mo

Sources: National property tax median per Tax Foundation; Bell County blended rate per BellCAD & Ballard Property Tax Protest (2026); insurance per The Zebra and Central Texas market data.

That $398/month gap is why someone can run a national calculator, decide buying makes sense, and then be genuinely surprised by their first escrow statement. On a $255,000 home, the actual holding costs are nearly $400/month higher than most online tools project.

“The most common mistake I see from out-of-state buyers is budgeting for Texas property taxes based on what they Googled. Texas has no state income tax. The money comes from property taxes — and Bell County’s rate is higher than most of the country.”

The True Monthly Cost of Buying in Temple TX

Here’s an honest breakdown for a $255,000 home — the current Bell County median — at three different down payment levels. All figures use a 6.9% 30-year fixed rate (current as of June 2026), the 2.35% blended Bell County effective tax rate, and $3,400/year for homeowners insurance.

Monthly Cost Component 3.5% Down ($8,925) 10% Down ($25,500) 20% Down ($51,000)
Principal & Interest $1,596/mo $1,517/mo $1,346/mo
PMI (if applicable) $127/mo $107/mo $0
Property Tax (2.35%) $499/mo $499/mo $499/mo
Homeowners Insurance $283/mo $283/mo $283/mo
Maintenance (1% of value/yr) $213/mo $213/mo $213/mo
Total Monthly Cost $2,718/mo $2,619/mo $2,341/mo

PMI estimated at 0.6% annually. Maintenance at 1% of home value annually — conservative estimate for Bell County homes. No HOA included; add $50–$200/mo for applicable communities.

Homestead Exemption Impact

Filing your homestead exemption immediately after closing removes $140,000 from your school district taxable value. On Temple ISD’s $1.1372 rate, that saves approximately $133/month in property tax. This changes the effective monthly cost from $2,619 to roughly $2,486 at 10% down — but only for owner-occupants who file. Investors don’t get this.

The True Cost of Renting in Temple TX

Current Temple rental data from May–June 2026 across multiple sources:

Property Type Monthly Rent Range Median Source
Studio / 1BR apartment $750–$1,039 $980 Apartment List, May 2026
2BR apartment $1,100–$1,400 $1,250 RentCafe / Yardi Matrix
3BR single-family home $1,500–$1,900 $1,700 Zillow / local MLS data
4BR single-family home $1,800–$2,400 $2,045 RentHop, March 2026

The fair comparison to a $255,000 purchase isn’t a 2BR apartment — it’s a comparable 3BR house. At $1,700/month for a 3BR rental plus $20/month renter’s insurance, the true renting cost is approximately $1,720/month in year one.

That’s a $899/month gap versus buying with 10% down ($2,619 vs. $1,720). But that gap narrows every year as rent rises and the mortgage payment stays fixed. And it ignores the equity building on the buying side entirely.

The Rent Escalation Problem

Temple rents have risen 3–4% annually over the last several years. At 3% annual growth, that $1,720/month rent becomes $1,934/month by year 4, $2,179/month by year 8. Your 30-year fixed mortgage payment never goes up. That compounding difference is where buying wins over time — not in year one.

Scenario Analysis: 4 Bell County Buyer Profiles

The rent vs. buy answer isn’t the same for everyone. Here’s how it works out across four common Bell County situations.

BSW Medical Resident

3–5 year stay, physician loan (0% down), $270K home

Monthly buy cost$2,580
Comparable rent$1,750
Monthly gap-$830/mo
Breakeven (est.)~5 years
VerdictBorderline — stay 5+ yrs to buy

Fort Cavazos E-5 Family

2–3 yr PCS, $220K home, VA loan (0% down, no PMI)

Monthly buy cost$2,180
BAH allowance$1,920/mo
Out-of-pocket gap$260/mo
Rental income if PCS$1,500+/mo
VerdictBuy — convert to rental at PCS

Relocating Family (Austin exodus)

Long-term, 20% down, $280K home, staying 7+ years

Monthly buy cost$2,390
Comparable rent$1,800
Monthly gap yr 1-$590/mo
Breakeven (est.)~4 years
VerdictBuy — clear winner at 7 yrs

First-Time Buyer (2–3 yr horizon)

Uncertain timeline, 5% down, $235K starter home

Monthly buy cost$2,280
Comparable rent$1,550
Monthly gap-$730/mo
Breakeven (est.)~5–6 years
VerdictRent — timeline too short

The School District Variable Nobody Talks About

Where in Bell County you buy changes the property tax math significantly — and most articles skip this entirely.

School District ISD Rate (per $100) Est. Total Rate Annual Tax ($255K) Monthly Tax
Temple ISD $1.1372 ~2.35% $5,993 $499
Belton ISD $1.1494 ~2.40% $6,120 $510
Killeen ISD $0.8778 ~1.90% $4,845 $404
Salado ISD ~$1.05 ~2.20% $5,610 $468

Rates per BellCAD and Ballard Property Tax Protest (2026 figures). Estimates only — verify with Bell County Appraisal District for your specific property.

The difference between a Temple ISD home and a Killeen ISD home is approximately $95/month in property tax on the same purchase price. Over 10 years, that’s $11,400. This is why the rent vs. buy answer isn’t just about the mortgage rate — your school district affects the outcome materially.

The Lake Pointe Arbitrage

Lake Pointe in Temple is zoned Belton ISD but sits within Temple city limits — giving buyers Belton ISD school ratings at Temple’s lower city tax rate. Homes here run $280K–$380K. For families comparing school districts, it’s the most underpriced combination in Bell County right now.

When Does Buying Beat Renting in Bell County?

The breakeven point — where buying has built more total net wealth than renting and investing the down payment — depends on four variables more than anything else:

  • Down payment size. Larger down payment = lower monthly cost = earlier breakeven. A 20% down payment shifts breakeven from ~5 years to ~3.5 years at median Bell County prices.
  • Rent growth rate. At 3% annual rent increases, the monthly gap between renting and buying closes within 5–6 years. At 4% growth, it closes faster.
  • Home appreciation. Bell County appreciated roughly 3–4% annually pre-2023. The market softened in 2024–2025 (Temple median down ~4.2% year-over-year per Redfin, Feb 2026). Conservative 2–3% appreciation assumptions are appropriate right now.
  • Opportunity cost of the down payment. Money sitting in a house isn’t in the market. If you’d otherwise invest your down payment at 6–7% returns, renting wins longer than most buyers expect.

For most Bell County scenarios at current prices and rates: buying wins after 4–6 years. Renting wins if your horizon is under 3 years. The gray zone is 3–5 years — where lifestyle factors (stability, school access, flexibility) should drive the decision more than the spreadsheet.


Run Your Numbers: Bell County Buy vs. Rent Calculator

The analysis above uses Bell County median inputs. Your situation — your down payment, the specific home price, your timeline, your school district — changes the answer. The calculator below is pre-loaded with actual local data. Adjust it to match your scenario.

Interactive Tool

Bell County Buy vs. Rent Calculator

Pre-loaded with 2026 Bell County property tax rates, Central Texas insurance costs, and current Temple rent data. Adjust any input — results update instantly. Four city presets: Temple, Belton, Killeen, Harker Heights.

Open the Calculator → See breakeven by city

Want to run a specific property through the math?

The calculator uses market averages. A 15-minute call gets you a CMA for a specific address, a real net-proceeds estimate, and an honest read on whether your timeline and budget favor buying in Bell County right now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Month-to-month in year one, renting a comparable home is cheaper — typically by $700–$900/month depending on down payment. But that gap closes every year as rents rise and the mortgage stays fixed. At a 4–6 year horizon with 10% down, buying builds more total wealth at current Bell County prices and rates. The break-even timing depends heavily on your down payment size and how long you stay.
On a $255,000 home with 10% down at 6.9%: principal and interest is $1,517/month, property tax is $499/month (2.35% blended rate), homeowners insurance is $283/month, PMI is approximately $107/month, and maintenance runs $213/month. Total: approximately $2,619/month before any HOA. After filing the homestead exemption (which removes $140K from your school district taxable value), the effective monthly tax drops by roughly $133, bringing total cost closer to $2,486/month for owner-occupants.
Bell County’s effective rate of 1.46%–2.35% (depending on city and school district) is above the Texas statewide median of approximately 1.48%. Temple homeowners specifically — paying Temple ISD at $1.1372 per $100 — face one of the higher combined rates in the region. Killeen homeowners (Killeen ISD at $0.8778) pay substantially less. This variation within the county is one of the most underappreciated factors in Bell County’s buy vs. rent math.
Central Texas sits in a severe convective storm corridor that generates frequent hail events. Texas home insurance premiums have increased 19–21% in recent years market-wide, and the Bell County area sees above-average claim frequency due to hail. Budget $3,400–$4,000/year for a typical Bell County home. The biggest variable is roof age — a roof older than 10 years will significantly increase your quotes. New construction with impact-resistant shingles will be at the lower end of the range.
It depends on your expected tenure. A 3-year residency is generally too short for buying to win — the $700–$900/month gap between owning and renting doesn’t recover in that window after accounting for transaction costs (roughly 8–10% round-trip). A 5-year residency is borderline. Residents extending through fellowship (5–7 years total) are often better served by buying — especially using a physician loan (0% down, no PMI) which changes the monthly math significantly. VA loan-eligible military residents at Fort Cavazos with 3-year PCS windows can sometimes justify buying by converting the property to a rental at departure.
The Texas homestead exemption removes $140,000 from your school district’s taxable value on your primary residence. At Temple ISD’s rate of $1.1372 per $100, that saves $1,592/year — approximately $133/month — in school taxes alone. File immediately after closing with the Bell County Appraisal District. It is not automatic. You must reapply if you move. Investors do not qualify. This is the single most important tax action a Temple homeowner can take after closing.
Moody Glasgow, REALTOR® — Temple TX

Moody Glasgow, REALTOR®

Orchard Realty · Temple, TX · TREC License #795158

My background is in economics and mathematics. Before showing a client a single house, I run the numbers — what comparable sales actually tell us, what the absorption rate says about timing, what the honest net looks like after taxes, insurance, and carrying costs. The analysis on this page is what I’d walk you through on a call.