Association of Professional Rental Organizations (APRO)

Rent-to-Own 101

New to rent-to-own? Explore the basics to understand how it works and why it matters to millions of Americans.

The Access Economy: Why Ownership Is No Longer the Only Goal

Last Updated on June 23, 2026

Understanding How Consumer Expectations Have Changed #

For much of modern history, ownership was the default answer.

If you wanted to listen to music, you bought records, tapes, or CDs. If you wanted to watch a movie, you purchased a DVD. If you needed software, you bought a box containing disks and installation manuals. Ownership was not simply common. It was the expectation.

Today, many consumers live very differently.

They stream music instead of building record collections. They subscribe to software instead of purchasing permanent licenses. They store photographs in the cloud rather than on shelves full of hard drives. They pay for access to transportation, entertainment, information, and technology in ways that would have seemed unusual only a generation ago.

Something fundamental has changed.

Consumers increasingly care less about whether they own something today and more about whether they can use it when they need it.

Economists, technology analysts, and business leaders often describe this shift as the rise of the access economy.

The idea is simple. Ownership remains valuable, but it is no longer the only way consumers derive value from products and services.

That change helps explain many of the most successful business models of the past twenty-five years. It also helps explain something else:

Why rent-to-own continues to serve millions of consumers across the United States.

Access Has Always Been Part of the Economy #

The access economy is often discussed as if it were a new phenomenon created by smartphones, streaming services, or Silicon Valley.

In reality, consumers have always found ways to pay for access rather than immediate ownership.

People rent apartments rather than buying homes. Businesses lease equipment rather than purchasing every asset outright. Libraries have provided access to books for centuries. Hotels allow travelers to use accommodations without owning property.

What has changed is the scale.

Technology has made access easier, faster, and more convenient than ever before. As a result, consumers have become increasingly comfortable paying for what a product or service enables rather than focusing exclusively on ownership itself.

A Spotify subscription is not valuable because someone owns music files. It is valuable because they can listen to nearly any song they want, whenever they want.

A cloud-storage subscription is not valuable because someone owns servers. It is valuable because their files are available when they need them.

The value comes from access.

Consumers Often Need Utility Before Ownership #

This same principle appears throughout everyday life.

When a refrigerator stops working, most families are not primarily concerned with ownership. They are concerned with preserving food.

When a laptop fails, a student is not thinking about long-term asset accumulation. They are thinking about completing assignments due next week.

When tires wear out, a worker is not evaluating ownership theory. They are trying to get safely to work tomorrow morning.

The immediate need is not ownership.

The immediate need is utility.

Ownership may eventually become important, but access solves the immediate problem.

This distinction is one reason economists sometimes describe access and ownership as serving different functions rather than competing with one another.

Rent-to-Own and the Access Economy #

Viewed through this lens, rent-to-own begins to look less like an outlier and more like an early example of a broader economic trend.

Long before subscription services became commonplace, rent-to-own allowed consumers to obtain access to products through recurring payments rather than large upfront purchases.

The products were different:

  • Furniture
  • Appliances
  • Mattresses
  • Electronics
  • Computers
  • Tires
  • Sheds

But the underlying idea was surprisingly similar.

Consumers could obtain immediate use of a product while preserving flexibility about what came next.

In many respects, rent-to-own anticipated ideas that later became central to the modern subscription economy.

The difference is that rent-to-own applies those ideas to durable physical goods.

Where Rent-to-Own Differs from Most Subscription Models #

The comparison is useful, but it is not perfect.

Most subscription services are built entirely around access.

When payments stop, access stops.

Rent-to-own introduces another possibility.

Ownership.

A consumer may continue using the product. They may return it. They may exercise an Early Purchase Option. They may ultimately acquire ownership through the agreement.

This creates a model that sits somewhere between traditional ownership and pure subscription.

One way to think about rent-to-own is as a form of subscribe-to-own.

The consumer receives the flexibility associated with access while retaining the possibility of eventual ownership.

That combination is relatively uncommon in the broader access economy.

Why This Trend Is Likely to Continue #

There is little evidence that consumers are moving away from access-based models.

If anything, the trend appears to be accelerating.

Consumers increasingly expect:

  • Flexibility
  • Convenience
  • Immediate availability
  • Choice
  • Lower upfront commitments

At the same time, ownership remains an important aspiration for many households.

This suggests that future consumer markets may not revolve around a choice between ownership and access.

Instead, the most successful models may combine elements of both.

That is one reason rent-to-own remains relevant in an economy that increasingly values flexibility.

The transaction has always been about more than ownership.

It has always been about providing access when access matters most.

Mike Lewis

Mike Lewis is a Premier Rental Purchase franchisee with multiple stores and currently serves as Vice President of Operations. With 33 years of experience in the rent-to-own industry, he has spent the past 20 years working closely with franchisee owners and previously spent 12 years in Corporate RTO, gaining a strong foundation in the business.

For the past five years, Mike has been sharing his knowledge by teaching managers and franchisees at the company’s Training Center.

Outside of work, he enjoys time with his family, kids, and grandkids, and appreciates the simple things in life – especially riding his Harley Davidson with the sun on his face. If you know, you know!

Lauren Talicska

Arona Corporation dba Arona Home Essentials

Lauren Talicska is an experienced multi-channel marketing specialist and the Vice President of Marketing & Communications at Arona Home Essentials. She has found her home in the RTO community, supporting stores in branding, growth, and increasing traffic.

You may recognize Lauren as a former RTO vendor, including her time as a partner for Nationwide RentDirect, or her previous participation in the APRO Vendor Advisory Committee. Lauren calls Columbus, Ohio, home and spends her workday crafting and executing marketing promotions from inception to realization, all while supporting the branding and social media needs of all the Arona stores in 12 states (plus Puerto Rico!).

Charles Smitherman

APRO

Charles Smitherman, JD, PhD, CAE, became CEO of APRO in 2023, bringing years of legal and executive experience in the rent-to-own industry. 

Prior to joining the association, Charles served as COO, General Counsel, and Vice President of PTS Financial Services, where he played an active role in the rent-to-own industry by representing his company through PTS’s club program offering with APRO member dealers. Charles is an attorney with two decades of experience across a wide variety of areas, including RTO, consumer financial services, antitrust, corporate law, mergers and acquisitions, litigation, franchise law, and privacy law. Following law school at the University of Georgia, Charles earned a Master of Legal Studies and PhD in Law from the University of Oxford in England.

Charles is credentialed as a Certified Association Executive (CAE) with the American Society of Association Executives, a Certified Franchise Executive (CFE) with the International Franchise Association, and a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/US) and Certified Information Privacy Manager (CIPM) through the International Association of Privacy Professionals. As APRO’s sixth CEO in its 45-year history, he brings a collaborative, member-focused approach to association leadership, emphasizing transparency, advocacy, and value creation. Outside of work, Charles is an active ultra runner and open water swimmer.

Mike Kays

Ashley Furniture Industries

As VP of Rental Sales for Ashley Furniture Industries, Mike thrives on building relationships with our RTO industry veterans, and helping businesses grow through new product, new marketing, and new supply chain options.

Mike works to leverage a wide breadth of relationships and influence, intimate knowledge of market trends, and unique knowledge of what RTO dealers need from a supplier to be successful.

The saying goes that a high tide raises all boats, and our goal is to leverage the world’s largest furniture manufacturer to drive the continued growth of the RTO industry and all the suppliers.

Mike Tissot

Countryside Rentals Inc., dba Rent-2-Own

Mike grew up in the rent-to-own industry under the guidance of his father, former APRO President and RTO legend Darrell Tissot. For nearly 25 years, Mike’s innovative leadership has helped expand the family business to more than 40 stores across Ohio and Kentucky while also shaping the industry as a whole.

He has served as President of the Ohio Rental Dealers Association, an APRO board member and Treasurer, and President and Treasurer of the TRIB Group. His contributions have earned him the APRO President’s Award of Excellence and the title of APRO Rental Dealer of the Year.

Outside of RTO, Mike enjoys time at the lake house or in Orange Beach, Alabama, with his girlfriend, Angela Strong McCool. A passionate Cincinnati Reds fan, he rarely misses a game, whether watching or listening alongside his parents. He also takes every opportunity to visit Arizona, where his daughter is currently attending Arizona State University.