
Flexibility and financial pragmatism are redefining what success means for younger generations.
For decades, renting a home was seen as a “waiting room” for eventual home ownership. However, in recent years, this ideology has shifted entirely, as 46% of urban tenants have stated that they prefer long-term renting over buying, according to NoBroker’s Rent Report 2026. Among millennials, specifically individuals aged 25-34, the number climbs to an astonishing 53 per cent.
The shift to long-term renting can be attributed to a multitude of reasons. The report states that Indian tenants are currently sitting on a staggering ₹1,26,042 crore in frozen security deposits, a colossal sum of dead capital that exceeds the annual infrastructure budgets of multiple states. In cities like Mumbai, a quarter of all renters are now funnelling over half their monthly paycheck into rent.
Mortgage costs far outstrip rental payments
The gap between a monthly rent check and a mortgage payment (EMI) has widened into a chasm. In Gurgaon, a mortgage means paying a staggering 2.68x more each month than renting the exact same property. In Bangalore, that multiple sits at a punishing 2.38x. For newer generations, renting isn’t a lack of ambition but a calculated financial defence strategy. They are locked into tenancy not by a lack of desire, but by hard arithmetic.
Tenancy dictated by arithmetic, not preference
The gap between monthly rent and a home loan mortgage (EMI) has widened to an extreme degree. In Gurgaon, an EMI is now 2.68x the rent for the exact same property. In Noida and Bangalore, the mortgage-to-rent multiple stands at 2.39x and 2.38x, respectively. The report states that a home loan now demands a monthly outflow that tenants simply cannot justify. They are being locked into prolonged tenancy “not by preference but by arithmetic.”
Renters pushed to city outskirts as price gap widens
The rental price gap between the city core and the outer edges for standard configurations has widened dramatically over the years. Displaced professionals are being quietly pushed out of prime city centres into outer micro-markets, where new residential inventory is expanding rapidly to absorb them.
Cultural attitudes evolve as flexibility trumps ownership
Beyond the spreadsheet, there is a profound cultural shift. High-earning millennials and Gen Z professionals prioritise flexibility over fixed brick-and-mortar, viewing a 30-year mortgage as an anchor. The modern definition of wealth has fundamentally shifted as success is no longer measured by assets but by maximising agile, personal liquidity.
Published on July 9, 2026
