These metro Phoenix residents are renting instead of buying homes

Article originally posted on AZ Central on January 20, 2026

Paul Ruffino owns a home in north Scottsdale’s Troon area but lives with his wife and two daughters in a luxury rental house in north Phoenix where they have a trash valet and resort-style amenities.

He’s part of a growing group of renters-by-choice, who are opting for maintenance-free homes and apartments with garages that are located in popular locations and cost less than a mortgage payment.

“It’s ideal and so much easier than buying another house,” Ruffino, who is in his mid-50s, said. “My wife likes new homes, and our rental house satisfies all our needs.”

He said he can rent out his Scottsdale house for $5,000 a week in the winter. That’s almost double his rent.

The rent-by-choice trend is largely driven by empty nesters who have sold houses and want to downsize, travel more and ditch home repairs, say developers, property managers and renters.

Also, renting by choice are millennials who can buy homes but don’t want to. In metro Phoenix, those millennials include professional athletes and others who can afford higher rents and want the flexibility it gives them to move quickly for another job.

The stigma of renting is quickly changing. At the same time, millennials are opting for other ways of building wealth, including sports gambling, investing in stocks and cryptocurrency instead of buying home.

“People aren’t as concerned with home ownership now,” said Branden Lombardi, president of Scottsdale-based BB Living that developed the community that Ruffino lives in and several others. “We try to build where people want to live the most like Scottsdale, Tempe and Chandler.”

BB Living home rents can be around $4,000 a month in Scottsdale, but he said that’s much more affordable than buying an older home and paying $6,000-$7,000 per month in a mortgage.

Amenities keep improving in the Valley’s luxury rentals. The communities can come with dog parks, concierges, whiskey and wine rooms, clubhouses with chef kitchens for residents to entertain in and even DNA dog testing to cut down on poop left in common areas.

Housing for those who choose to rent driving Phoenix construction

Renters by choice are driving apartment development in metro Phoenix.

Almost 90% of the Valley apartments built in 2025 were lifestyle developments, according to research firm Yardi Matrix. Those are rentals for tenants with the money and incomes to buy houses but opt to rent.

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