The legger has more than just the rent paid. The rent money is entirely gone after each month, not to be seen ever again. Some of the mortgage money that pays off debit is in your property and accumulates over time. If you pay 10% more than the minimum mortgage payment you shorten the loan period dramatically with all of that 10% being still yours but shifted into the property. Other than a roof over your head, rent is money thrown away.
Another thing that might be effecting my perspective is 'lock-in'. Lets say I bought my house in the early 90s (which is likely to be true, I don't remember).
At the time we were living in a hovel for around 600/mo.
When I bought, I increased footage a little bit, but the payment per month was just about a wash, including taxes and catastrophic insurance, which was built into the payment.
Now... Here's the thing: It didn't remain at 600/mo though the actual payment remained the same - The difference was increase in the taxes and insurance. But it was always substantially under a grand per month. I know that because at the time of my first destruction, I was just fixin to move, and the new place would have cost right at 1100/mo, and it was making me itchy - While I coulod easily afford it, I was worried if I could make the payment, for sure. in the face of any sort of downturn... And whether I could continue to make double payments often to make the note leave quickly.
It was a big decision because I have always very pointedly lived within my means. I am SO glad I didn't make that move.
Suffice it to say that I have never paid a thousand a month in either rent or mortgage (other than double payments in the good times, I mean). EVER.
Now I know one could say that skews my perspective , and I am sure it does. But that is precisely because I was locked-in to 90s prices, more or less.
Providing you buy in the bottom of a downturn, property values tend to rise over time. if you lock in, then property values will increase your equity, rather than your cost, and rental costs, which are tied to property values, will also increase around you. Within a decade you will likely be paying substantially less than market, even without trying to pay it off.