You can probably own for less per month than you’re paying to rent.
Not in ten years. Now. In a lot of affordable cities, buying a small duplex and renting out the other half costs you less every month than renting a one-bedroom. Here are the real numbers — with every assumption shown.
The proof, three cities
Each of these is a modest, entry-level duplex bought with a 3.5%-down FHA loan — the kind first-time buyers actually use. You live in one side; a tenant in the other covers most of the payment. The “own” figure already sets aside $200/month for repairs and the odd empty month, so it’s the honest all-in, not a best case.
The pattern holds across a lot of the Midwest, the Rust Belt, and the South. The free roadmap below shows how to run your own city’s numbers in a few minutes — and the exact path to get there from wherever you’re starting.
Here’s the exact math — Cleveland
No hand-waving. A $150,000 duplex, 3.5% down on a 30-year FHA loan at 6.0%, financing the upfront mortgage insurance.
Renting a one-bedroom in Cleveland runs about $1,150/month. Owning the whole duplex — and building equity — costs you roughly $620 less every month. That gap is the entire idea behind VanToVault.
What this is not (because honesty is the whole point)
- It’s not free money or a get-rich thing. It’s getting your housing cost down to near-nothing so you can finally save — the same move I used to climb out.
- You do need cash to get in: about 3.5% down plus closing costs. Down-payment assistance can cut that a lot, and the roadmap shows you where to find it.
- With an FHA loan you have to live in the property for at least the first year. You’ll be a landlord living next to a tenant — a real trade-off, just not a dollar one.
- It doesn’t work in expensive markets or at every price. Where duplexes are pricey (much of the coasts), the math flips. This is a Midwest / Rust Belt / South play.
- The numbers already include a repair-and-vacancy cushion, so they’re conservative on purpose. Your real deal could be better or worse — run your own.
Okay — how do I actually do this from where I’m standing?
You don’t need rich parents or 20% down. You need a plan that starts from your real situation — debt, low savings, all of it — and sequences the climb. That’s the free roadmap.
How these numbers were built. FHA loan, 3.5% down, 30-year fixed at 6.0% (FHA rates, July 2026), upfront MIP of 1.75% financed into the loan, annual MIP of 0.55%. Property taxes and insurance are local estimates; the rented unit is assumed to bring in at or slightly below the local one-bedroom rent (conservative — a duplex half usually rents for more). Every “own” figure includes a $200/month reserve for maintenance and vacancy. Home and rent figures reflect 2026 market data from Redfin, Zillow, Zumper, Rent.com and RentCafe. These are illustrative estimates to show the pattern, not a quote or financial advice — run your own city’s numbers before deciding.
The First-Property Bundle
The step-by-step playbook, the six-calculator deal-analyzer toolkit, and the down-payment-assistance finder — the exact system I used to go from a van to a duplex.
Pay what you want. Name your price — and if money’s tight, take it for less.
Get the bundle →Get the free $0-to-First-Property Roadmap
The five-stage plan I used to go from living in a van to owning a duplex, no rich parents required.
