Imputed rent is the estimated rental price that an individual would pay for an asset they own. This concept applies broadly to capital goods but is most frequently used in housing markets to measure the rent homeowners would pay for a housing unit equivalent to their own. Imputing housing rent is essential for accurately measuring economic activity in national accounts, as asset owners do not actually pay rent, requiring indirect estimation methods.
Imputed housing rent applies the theory of imputation to real estate, where value is determined by what buyers are willing to pay rather than the seller's costs. Market rents serve as a proxy to estimate the value to the property owner, enabling comparisons between the economic decisions of homeowners and tenants.
Formally, in owner-occupancy, the typical landlord–leasehold estate relationship is bypassed. For example, consider two property owners, A and B. If A lives in B's property and B lives in A's, rent payments occur between them. However, if both are owner-occupiers, no monetary exchange takes place, despite the same underlying economic relationships. The hypothetical rent that would have been paid in a landlord-tenant arrangement is the imputed rent. This concept can also be viewed as returns on asset investments and may be included in disposable income calculations, such as for income distribution indices.
In the United States, the Bureau of Labor Statistics employs this method to estimate price changes for owner-occupied housing in the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
Where:
The imputed rent is the sum of these rates multiplied by the house price, . More advanced models account for differential interest costs (e.g., housing debt vs. equity) and tax treatment of housing income.
In datasets like the Cross-National Equivalent File, imputed rent is estimated as follows:
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