Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below.
Warren Buffett didn’t buy his home expecting it to beat the stock market. He bought it to raise a family.
Back in 1958, the Oracle of Omaha dropped $31,500 on a five-bedroom house in a quiet Omaha neighborhood. In today’s world of megamansions and celebrity compounds, that number feels laughably quaint. But to Buffett, the value wasn’t in the square footage — it was in the memories.
In his 2010 annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, Buffett wrote: “All things considered, the third best investment I ever made was the purchase of my home, though I would have made far more money had I instead rented and used the purchase money to buy stocks. (The two best investments were wedding rings.)”
Only Buffett could say a $1.4 million property was a financial underperformer — and be right.
Even adjusted for inflation, the appreciation on that home looks modest compared to the exponential rise of Berkshire stock over the same stretch. The house is now worth somewhere between $1.2 million and $1.5 million, depending on the estimate. Not bad — just not Buffett-level.
But that’s the point.
“For the $31,500 I paid for our house,” Buffett wrote, “my family and I gained 52 years of terrific memories with more to come.” It wasn’t just a financial move. It was a life move. And that distinction, in Buffett’s world, matters.
This wasn’t a subtle flex — it was a lesson in opportunity cost. The 2010 letter was written in the shadow of the 2008 housing crisis, when millions of Americans were reevaluating what homeownership meant. Buffett, ever the teacher, reminded shareholders that a house isn’t an automatic wealth-builder — it’s only an investment if you treat it like one.
Don’t Miss:
Over the years, he’s reiterated that homes can be a great source of personal value — just not necessarily the best place to park your cash if you’re chasing high returns.
Still, there’s something quietly powerful about the world’s most famous investor choosing not to upgrade. No Malibu beach house. No Aspen ski lodge. Just the same home on Farnam Street, lived in for nearly seven decades.
Buffett’s example lands with even more weight today as buyers stretch their budgets to chase “starter homes” priced like mini-mansions. The median home now costs around $410,000, mortgage rates remain historically high, and many households are banking on appreciation that might not arrive.


