Being brutally honest here, there’s something especially gutting about being told to “just keep renting and saving” when, for generations, buying a home was treated like the normal next step. For generations, just having a home, keeping it tidy, and having that forever home was just the norm. Sure, maybe it wasn’t always easy to get a home, but it was normal, and it was still fairly obtainable. Like people worked, saved, bought a place, painted the walls, planted something in the garden, complained about the boiler, and got on with building a life.
Now? For a lot of renters, that same path feels like it’s been moved behind glass. Like, it’s still visible, still talked about like it’s possible, but somehow always just out of reach. And yeah, that’s happening everywhere. Like, not just where you are, but different countries, different cities, different housing markets, same exhausted feeling.
But rent keeps climbing, wages don’t stretch far enough, deposits look ridiculous, and people are still being spoken to like the problem is a takeaway coffee, avocado toast, or a lack of budgeting discipline. It’s insulting, honestly.
Nope, the Old Advice Doesn’t Match the New Reality
Well, the whole “rent and save” made more sense when rent didn’t swallow such a huge chunk of income. It made more sense when house prices felt somewhat connected to wages. It made more sense when saving for a deposit didn’t feel like trying to outrun a train while carrying groceries, bills, student debt, and the general cost of existing.
A lot of renters are doing the responsible things already. Sure, stupid stuff on social media floats around that tries to twist the narrative, but generally speaking here, your average renter is being smart. They know their monthly costs. They’ve cut back. They’ve moved money into savings when they can. They’ve said no to plans, delayed purchases, stayed in places they’ve outgrown, and watched every little price increase chip away at the plan. So that whole “avocado toast” meme shouldn’t be taken seriously.
Rent Takes the Money Before the Future Gets a Chance
The cruel thing about renting is that it can keep someone housed while also making it harder to move forward. Every month, the rent gets paid, because of course it does, people need somewhere to live. And down payments for a house are expensive, and people are overbidding on houses too, and getting a mortgage is only getting more and more strict. Literally, how could you NOT be hopeless here?
People Need More than One Way
Which, fortunately, is starting to happen, and people are starting to get a bit more aware of this, too. But no, it’s not just the traditional route. It could honestly help to look into living rent for the area you’re living in, especially if it’s a major city. But you need stability, you need breathing room, and there are some routes out there that might not be “easy” or “straightforward” as the traditional way, but they’re still there. Like, there’s rent-to-own, there’s buying with multiple people (so multiple, not just one other person), there are some programs in certain cities and towns (and rural areas that are trying to get people to move to those). It might not be the way you imagined it, but it’s something, though.




























