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Life & Perspective

Renting vs Buying a Condo Near BGC: What the Numbers Actually Say (2026)

By Juno dela Cruz March 13, 2026 7 min read

We ran the actual math on buying versus renting near BGC — and the answer surprised us enough to change our plans.

My partner and I spent three weekends last year doing what I can only describe as the most stressful spreadsheet exercise of our relationship. We were seriously considering buying a condo near BGC — one of those mid-rise units in Kapitolyo or along Kalayaan — and we wanted to be responsible about it. We pulled up listings, called brokers, asked our parents what they thought. Everyone said the same thing: mag-invest ka na, huwag mag-aksaya ng pera sa renta. Rent is money down the drain. Buying builds equity. We’d heard it a hundred times.

Then we started reading the fine print.

The sticker price on a ₱6.5 million studio looked manageable on a 20-year loan. The monthly amortization even compared favorably to what we were paying in rent. But once we started adding everything else — the association dues, the move-in fees, the interest we’d be paying over two decades, the opportunity cost of the downpayment — the picture got more complicated. We didn’t stop wanting to buy. We just stopped being in a hurry.

What You Actually Pay Every Month: Rent vs. Buy

The monthly amortization is the number developers lead with. It’s almost never the number you actually pay. Here’s a realistic side-by-side of what renting versus owning a comparable unit near BGC looks like on a monthly basis.

Cost Item Renting (Monthly) Buying (Monthly Est.) Notes
Rent / Amortization ₱18,000–₱35,000 ₱28,000–₱45,000 Loan: ₱5.2M–₱8M, 20 yrs, ~7% p.a.
Association Dues Included or ₱0 ₱3,000–₱6,000 Typically ₱80–₱120/sqm/month
Parking Fee ₱3,000–₱5,000 (if applicable) ₱3,000–₱5,000 (if applicable) Separate from unit price in most developments
Real Property Tax (monthly equiv.) ₱0 ₱1,500–₱3,500 ~1–2% of assessed value per year
Building Insurance ₱0 ₱500–₱1,200 Required by most banks for mortgaged units
Maintenance / Repairs Landlord’s responsibility ₱500–₱2,000 (budget) Appliances, fixtures, unit-interior repairs
**Estimated Monthly Total** **₱21,000–₱40,000** **₱36,500–₱62,700** Excludes utilities

Table: Rent vs Buy Monthly Cost Comparison

The gap between renting and owning is wider than most people expect — often ₱10,000 to ₱20,000 per month for a comparable unit. That difference doesn’t disappear; it either goes into your equity or into your flexibility, depending on which side you’re on.

The Upfront Cost Nobody Talks About Enough

The downpayment is the obvious one. But the cash you need on Day 1 of buying a condo is almost always higher than the downpayment figure in the brochure. These are the real numbers you need to have ready before you sign anything.

Cost Item Typical Amount Who Pays Notes
Downpayment (20%) ₱1,040,000–₱1,600,000 Buyer Based on ₱5.2M–₱8M unit price
Reservation Fee ₱20,000–₱50,000 Buyer Applied to downpayment
Documentary Stamp Tax ~1.5% of selling price Buyer Government-mandated
Transfer Tax 0.5–0.75% of selling price Buyer Varies by LGU
Registration Fee ~0.25% of selling price Buyer Land Registration Authority
Notarial / Legal Fees ₱10,000–₱30,000 Buyer Varies by developer and lawyer
Bank Processing / Appraisal Fee ₱5,000–₱15,000 Buyer Required for bank financing
Move-in Fee / Admin Fee ₱5,000–₱20,000 Buyer Developer or HOA requirement
**Estimated Total Upfront** **₱1,200,000–₱1,900,000+** Buyer Before any renovation or furnishing

Table: Upfront Costs of Buying a Condo Near BGC

That ₱1.2 to ₱1.9 million sitting in a high-yield savings account or invested conservatively could generate meaningful returns while you wait. That’s not an argument against buying — it’s just a number worth knowing before you commit.

The Recurring Costs That Erode the “Investment” Narrative

Even after you’ve paid the downpayment and moved in, ownership comes with a set of costs that don’t show up in the developer’s payment schedule. These are the ones that quietly change the math over time.

Cost Item Estimated Annual Cost Notes
Association Dues ₱36,000–₱72,000 Never decreases; often increases annually
Real Property Tax ₱18,000–₱42,000 Based on assessed value; reassessed periodically
Building / Fire Insurance ₱6,000–₱14,400 Often required by lender for duration of loan
Unit Maintenance & Repairs ₱6,000–₱24,000 Appliances, plumbing, paint, fixtures
Special Assessments Variable HOA-mandated building repairs; not always predictable
Sinking Fund Contributions ₱3,000–₱10,000 Some HOAs collect this separately
**Estimated Annual Recurring Total** **₱69,000–₱162,400+** Excludes mortgage interest and utilities

Table: Hidden Recurring Costs of Condo Ownership

Over a 20-year loan period, these recurring costs — even at the conservative end — can add ₱1.38 million or more to your total cost of ownership. That’s on top of the interest you’re paying on your loan, which on a ₱5.2 million principal at 7% over 20 years amounts to roughly ₱4.5 million in total interest paid. The unit you bought for ₱6.5 million may effectively cost you closer to ₱12 million by the time it’s fully yours.

Rent Ranges Near BGC by Area (2026)

If you’re not buying yet, knowing where to rent matters. BGC proper commands a premium, but the surrounding areas — Kapitolyo, Ugarte Field, parts of Pasay near EDSA — offer significantly lower rents for comparable living quality and commute times.

Area Studio (Monthly) 1-BR (Monthly) 2-BR (Monthly) Notes
BGC Proper (Taguig) ₱28,000–₱55,000 ₱38,000–₱75,000 ₱60,000–₱120,000 Highest demand; premium buildings
Kapitolyo, Pasig ₱16,000–₱28,000 ₱22,000–₱38,000 ₱35,000–₱60,000 10–15 min to BGC; strong lifestyle amenities
Ugarte Field / Buendia, Makati ₱18,000–₱32,000 ₱25,000–₱42,000 ₱38,000–₱65,000 Close to Ayala corridor; BGC accessible
Kalayaan Ave / Poblacion, Makati ₱15,000–₱26,000 ₱20,000–₱35,000 ₱32,000–₱55,000 More character, older stock; improving area
McKinley Hill, Taguig ₱20,000–₱38,000 ₱28,000–₱48,000 ₱42,000–₱75,000 Quieter; good for families; near BGC
Pasay (near EDSA-Taft) ₱12,000–₱22,000 ₱18,000–₱30,000 ₱28,000–₱48,000 Budget-friendly; longer commute to BGC core

Table: Rent Ranges Near BGC by Area

Note: Rent ranges are based on market listings as of early 2026. Rates are subject to change and vary significantly by building age, furnishing, and floor level. Always verify directly with landlords or brokers.

So What Did We Actually Decide?

We chose to rent. Not because buying is a bad idea — it isn’t, for the right person at the right time — but because when we laid everything out, we realized we were about to make a 20-year financial commitment while still being uncertain about a 3-year life plan. My partner is considering a role abroad — and honestly, so am I. We’re at that age where the question isn’t just where we want to live, but whether Manila is even the final answer. Locking ₱1.5 million into a downpayment and tying ourselves to an amortization schedule felt less like financial responsibility and more like financial stubbornness.

And yes — we know the counterargument. A condo near BGC isn’t just a home. It’s an asset. Property values in the BGC corridor have historically appreciated 5%–8% annually. A ₱7M unit today could be worth ₱10M in seven years. And if life takes us abroad, that same unit becomes a rental income source — a 2BR in BGC leased at ₱30,000/month covers most of the amortization while the asset appreciates underneath you. On paper, that’s not a bad position to be in.

But that math only works if you stay. Or if you’re financially ready to become a landlord from a different country — handling tenant concerns, dues, maintenance, and vacancy risk across time zones. We’re not ruling it out. We’re just honest that we’re not there yet.

So for now, we rent.

The “renting is throwing money away” argument assumes that the alternative use of your money is zero. It isn’t. The downpayment we didn’t spend is invested. The monthly difference between renting and owning is going somewhere useful. We’re not treading water — we’re just not in a rush to prove something to a broker.

What I’d tell anyone running these numbers: the math doesn’t automatically favor buying, especially not in the BGC corridor where prices are high, dues are steep, and the rental market is liquid enough that you’re not penalized for waiting. Buying makes sense when you have long-term certainty about where you want to live, stable income that can absorb the full cost of ownership, a realistic plan for the asset if life takes you elsewhere, and enough liquidity left over after the downpayment that you’re not one emergency away from distress.

We’re not there yet. And that’s okay. The spreadsheet will still be there when we are.

Disclaimer: All figures in this article are estimates based on publicly available market data and general financial assumptions as of March 2026. Individual costs will vary. Consult a licensed real estate broker and financial advisor before making any property purchase decision.


A BantayDailyPH Personal Essay by Juno dela Cruz.
Last updated: March 2026.