MLCCs, especially those with class-2-dielectric (and that is what we are talking about for buffer caps) are very sensitive to bias voltage.
A capacity is specified for 0V Bias and the higher your voltage, the lower the differential capacity (which is the effective value at your working point).
I really want to encourage you to take a look to the TKD homepage (
https://product.tdk.com/en/search/capacitor/ceramic/mlcc/characteristic/). The search interface at the bottom of their page allows you to select a capacity range at a certain DC voltage.
Example #1: You select a 10µF input capacity for a USB-device (up to 5.25V). You find a model with 6V3 rating at size 0805 and think you are done but then - surprise, surprise - at 5V the capacity is only 2 (!) µF.
Example #2: Let's take a more extreme case: You need a 100uF model operating at 12V - there are no MLCCs on the market that provide such a high capacity at that voltage. The best thing you can get is a 22uF/16V with size 2220 (5.0x5.7mm²).
Tantalum caps and electrolytic caps (and also class-1-dielectrics) do not have that bias-problem. However, the price for their stability is either a high ESR for small package sizes (e.g. Tantalum 0603 with up to 6 Ohms ESR) or a bulky device. As long as you have no problems with the component height you may simply use Electrolytic caps as regulator input caps, etc.
Let's take the previous example: 100uF @ 12V as SMD-component - for good measures you select a capacitor with 16V rating and and ESR<500mOhm. So let's have a look to Digikey:
* MLCC 100uF @ 12V not available, so 5x22uF/16V in size (5 times 5.7x5.0x3.1mm³, <10mOhm ESR): 5x0,77€= 3.85€
* Aluminum Electrolytic Cap: 100uF/16V (dia=5.0mm, h=6.1mm, 360mOhm ESR): 0.12€
* Aluminum-Polymer 100uF/16V (dia=6.3mm, h=6.0mm, 25mOhm ESR): 0.19€
* Tantalum 100uF/16V (6.0x3.2x2.8mm³, 200mOhm ESR): 0.36€
* Tantalum-Polymer 100uF/16V (7.3x4.3x2.0mm³, 50mOhm ESR): 0.61€
As you can see MLCCs don't even make sense as they are horribly expensive (almost 30x more - you can't ignore that in mass production).
If the component height is no problem you should simply chosse the conventional Aluminum-Electrolytic cap.
If you require a lower ESR take the Aluminum-Polymer-Cap.
If you have small space, take the Tantalum. If you require small space+low ESR, take the Tantalum-Polymer.
You see, there are several parameters to consider when decicion for a certain capacitor is done.