RENTAL PROPERTY
Cash Flow Calculator

See if your rental actually cash flows. Plug in income, expenses, and financing to get monthly cash flow, cash-on-cash return, cap rate, and the 1% rule check.

1 Property & Financing
Used for cash-on-cash return.
2 Rental Income
National average: 5–8%
Laundry, parking, pet rent, storage, etc.
3 Operating Expenses
Monthly Cash Flow
$0
Annual: $0
Income
Gross Rent$0
Vacancy Loss-$0
Other Income$0
Effective Income$0
Expenses
Tax + Insurance$0
HOA$0
Management$0
Maintenance + CapEx$0
Utilities$0
Mortgage (P&I)$0
Total Expenses$0
Returns
Cash-on-Cash0.0%
Cap Rate0.0%
NOI (Annual)$0
1% Rule
50% Rule Check
Estimates only. Actual cash flow varies based on market conditions, tenant behavior, unexpected repairs, and local regulations.

What a Rental Actually Has to Cover

Rental real estate looks simple on the surface: collect rent, pay the mortgage, pocket the difference. In practice, a rental has to cover a long list of line items before it produces real cash, and a deal that pencils out on the back of a napkin often turns negative once you run the full math. This calculator pushes you through every category that matters: debt service, taxes, insurance, HOA, property management, maintenance, capital expenditures, and vacancy. The output is an honest picture of monthly cash flow, annual cash flow, cash-on-cash return, and cap rate. If a property cannot cover all of those expenses and still leave cash in your pocket, it is not a rental, it is a hobby.

The Four Numbers That Matter

Every rental underwrite comes down to four metrics. Each one answers a different question, and using only one of them is how investors get fooled.

NOI = gross rent × (1 − vacancy) + other income − operating expenses
Cash flow = NOI − debt service
Cash-on-cash return = annual cash flow ÷ total cash invested
Cap rate = NOI ÷ purchase price

NOI (net operating income) is the property's income after operating expenses but before the mortgage. Cash flow is what is left after the mortgage. Cash-on-cash tells you the return on the cash you actually put in, including down payment and closing costs. Cap rate tells you the return if you paid all cash, which is how properties are compared across different financing structures.

A property with strong cap rate but weak cash-on-cash is usually over-leveraged. A property with strong cash-on-cash but weak cap rate is often cheaply bought but in a soft market. Both numbers together tell the story.

A Worked Example

Say you are looking at a $300,000 single-family rental. You put 25% down ($75,000), plus $6,000 in closing costs, for a total of $81,000 cash in. The loan is $225,000 at 7% over 30 years, giving you a monthly principal-and-interest payment of about $1,497. Rent is $2,400 per month.

  • Gross annual rent: $2,400 × 12 = $28,800
  • Vacancy allowance (5%): $1,440
  • Effective gross income: $27,360
  • Operating expenses (taxes, insurance, maintenance, capex reserves, management at ~40% of gross): about $11,500
  • NOI: $15,860
  • Annual debt service: $1,497 × 12 = $17,964
  • Annual cash flow: $15,860 − $17,964 = negative $2,100
  • Cap rate: $15,860 ÷ $300,000 = 5.3%
  • Cash-on-cash return: negative, since cash flow is negative

On paper this looks like a solid rental at a reasonable cap rate, but once you layer on today's higher mortgage rates, the cash flow is negative. This is exactly why rate-sensitivity matters. A 1% drop in rate on that same loan would swing the monthly payment by about $150, pushing the deal back into positive territory.

The 1% Rule, the 50% Rule, and Why They Exist

Two rules of thumb come up constantly in landlord conversations. They are not meant to be precise, but they are useful filters for knowing whether a property is worth running the full underwrite.

The 1% rule: Monthly rent should be at least 1% of the purchase price. A $200,000 house should rent for at least $2,000 a month. Most markets in the US no longer support the 1% rule at full list price, which is why investors have shifted toward off-market deals, value-add strategies, and secondary markets where prices remain low enough for rents to catch up.

The 50% rule: On average, operating expenses (not counting the mortgage) eat up about 50% of gross rent over the long run. This accounts for vacancy, maintenance, capex, management, taxes, and insurance. If a pro forma shows expenses at only 20% of rent, the underwriter is probably missing something. The 50% rule is a sanity check, not a formula.

Both rules break down in specific contexts: high-tax states push expenses above 50%, luxury markets push rent ratios below 1%, and new construction pushes maintenance reserves down early. Use them as starting points, not endpoints.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Forgetting capital expenditures. Roof, HVAC, water heater, appliances, and flooring all wear out. If you are not reserving roughly 5 to 10% of gross rent for capex, your cash flow is overstated and you will be blindsided when the AC dies in July.
  • Undercounting vacancy. Even in strong markets, units turn over. Budget at least 5% vacancy, and in higher-turnover markets (college towns, luxury rentals) 8 to 10%.
  • Using optimistic rent comps. Listing rents and actual leased rents diverge. Pull recent closed leases, not list prices, and discount for any units that have been sitting on the market.
  • Ignoring property management. Even if you self-manage, include an 8 to 10% management line. Your time is worth something, and if you ever sell or scale up, the next owner will underwrite with management included.
  • Skipping property taxes in the first year. Many states reassess at the sale price, so the seller's old tax bill will jump significantly after closing. Underwrite based on the reassessed figure, not the current one.
  • Treating appreciation as cash flow. Appreciation is a balance-sheet gain, not a cash-in-pocket return. It is real, but it does not pay your bills or cover a surprise expense.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good cash-on-cash return for a rental?
It depends on market and strategy. Historically, investors targeted 8 to 12% cash-on-cash on long-term rentals. In today's higher-rate environment, many markets deliver 4 to 8% on standard deals, with stronger returns reserved for value-add plays or secondary markets. Compare against a risk-free rate (treasuries) plus a premium for the work and risk of being a landlord. If a rental returns 4% and treasuries pay 5%, the math does not work unless you strongly believe in appreciation.
How is cap rate different from cash-on-cash return?
Cap rate uses NOI divided by purchase price and ignores financing entirely. Cash-on-cash uses after-debt cash flow divided by cash invested and is affected by how leveraged you are. Cap rate is how properties are compared apples-to-apples in a market. Cash-on-cash is how investors compare personal returns across deals. The same property can look different on the two metrics depending on the loan terms.
Should I put more money down to improve cash flow?
More down payment means lower debt service and higher monthly cash flow, but lower cash-on-cash return because you tied up more capital. Mathematically, leverage amplifies returns when cap rate exceeds borrowing cost and drags them when it does not. In high-rate environments, cap rates often fall below loan rates, which is why putting more down (or paying cash) can actually produce a better cash-on-cash in some deals. Run both scenarios before closing.
How do I estimate maintenance costs if the property is new to me?
A common benchmark is 5 to 15% of gross rent depending on property age and condition. Newer properties come in at the low end; 50-year-old homes with original systems come in at the high end. You can also use the "1% of property value per year" rule for total maintenance plus capex combined. Both are rough, so budget conservatively and adjust once you have a year or two of actual data on the specific property.
Does this calculator account for taxes and depreciation?
No. The cash flow output is pre-tax. Depreciation is a non-cash deduction that shields rental income from federal tax, often turning a "positive cash flow" deal into a "tax loss" on paper, which can be valuable. For after-tax analysis, you need to work with a CPA who understands rental real estate, especially if you are approaching the passive-loss limitations or claiming real estate professional status.
What is the difference between gross rent and effective gross income?
Gross rent is what the property would earn at 100% occupancy with no credit losses. Effective gross income is gross rent minus vacancy and collection loss, plus any other income (parking, laundry, fees). NOI is calculated from effective gross income, not gross rent. Using gross rent instead of effective gross income is a common error that overstates NOI and cap rate by 5 to 10%.

This calculator is for general underwriting and educational use. Always verify assumptions against local market data and consult a real estate professional and tax advisor before closing on an investment property.

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