Rental Income Calculator
Cap Rate, Cash Flow & ROI 2026
Calculate cap rate, cash on cash return, monthly cash flow, and DSCR for any US rental property. Enter rent, expenses, and financing to see if the deal pencils.
Quick answer: Key rental property formulas: Cap Rate = NOI ÷ Property Value × 100 (4–6% typical US residential 2026). Cash on Cash Return = Annual Cash Flow ÷ Down Payment × 100 (target 6–10%). NOI = Effective Gross Income − Operating Expenses (property tax, insurance, maintenance, management — NOT mortgage). DSCR = NOI ÷ Annual Debt Service (lenders require ≥1.20). The 50% rule: budget 50% of gross rent for operating expenses. Monthly cash flow = (NOI − annual debt service) ÷ 12. Sources: NAR, Investopedia, BiggerPockets.
Income
US average 5–8%. Check local CoStar or property manager data.
Annual Operating Expenses
= $3,500/yr
= $2,233/yr (0% = self-managed)
Financing (for Cash on Cash & DSCR)
Principal + interest only. Use $0 for all-cash analysis.
Cap Rate
3.85%
NOI / Property Value
Cash on Cash
-8.59%
Cash Flow / Down Payment
Monthly Cash Flow
$-626
after all expenses + mortgage
DSCR
0.64
≥1.25 for most lenders
Full Underwriting Summary
⚠ DSCR below 1.20 — most lenders require ≥1.20–1.25 for investment property loans. Consider a larger down payment, higher rent, or a lower purchase price to improve debt coverage.
⚠ Negative monthly cash flow — you'd need to contribute $626/month out of pocket. Re-run with lower purchase price, higher rent, or less leverage.
This is the textbook answer. Want to see this calculated against your actual accounts?
Connect them to Richify →Track Your Finances With Richify AI
Get personalised AI-powered financial insights. Free to download, no ads.
Download Richify — It’s FreeHow It Works
Four metrics drive rental property analysis. Understand each before underwriting a deal:
- Cap Rate — Property-level return independent of financing. NOI ÷ Value. Compare across deals on equal footing. 4–6% typical for US residential 2026.
- Cash on Cash (CoC) — Your actual cash yield on equity deployed. Includes mortgage payments. Can be far below cap rate if you're heavily leveraged at current 7%+ rates.
- Monthly Cash Flow — The number that keeps you solvent. Effective rent minus all expenses and debt service. Negative cash flow requires you to feed the property every month.
- DSCR — What lenders look at. NOI ÷ annual debt service. Must be ≥1.20–1.25 to qualify for most investment property and DSCR loans.
The 50% rule of thumb: budget 50% of gross rent for operating expenses (taxes, insurance, vacancy, maintenance, management). The remaining 50% is available for debt service and profit. If 50% of monthly rent doesn't cover your mortgage, the deal likely cash-flow-negative.
Sources: National Association of Realtors, Investopedia, BiggerPockets Rental Property Analyzer methodology, DSCR loan underwriting standards (Fannie Mae B3-3.1-09).
How To Use This Calculator
- Enter the monthly rent you charge (or expect to charge) for the property. This is gross rent before vacancy.
- Enter the property value (current market value or purchase price — use purchase price for acquisition analysis).
- Set the vacancy rate. Most markets average 5–8%. Use local data from CoStar, Zillow Research, or your property manager.
- Enter annual operating expenses: property tax, insurance, maintenance, management fee, and any landlord-paid utilities.
- For cash-on-cash return, enter your down payment and monthly mortgage payment (P&I only — exclude taxes and insurance if they are part of operating expenses above).
- Review Cap Rate, Cash on Cash Return, monthly cash flow, and DSCR. Compare cap rate to local market comps (LoopNet, Crexi) and your cost of capital.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate cap rate for a rental property?
Cap Rate = Net Operating Income (NOI) ÷ Property Value × 100. NOI = Annual Gross Rent × (1 − Vacancy Rate) − Operating Expenses. Operating expenses include property tax, insurance, maintenance, property management fees, and utilities (if landlord-paid) — but NOT mortgage payments. Example: $24,000 annual rent, 5% vacancy, $8,000 expenses, $300,000 property value → NOI = $22,800 − $8,000 = $14,800 → Cap Rate = 14,800 / 300,000 = 4.93%. Cap rate is a property metric independent of financing.
What is a good cap rate for rental property in 2026?
It depends on the market. Nationally, 4–6% cap rates are typical for stabilized residential rentals in 2026. High-cost coastal markets (NYC, LA, SF) often yield 2–4% cap rates — investors accept lower yields for appreciation. Secondary and Sun Belt markets commonly see 5–8%. Commercial properties and multifamily in tertiary markets can hit 7–10%+. A 'good' cap rate should exceed your break-even rate: if you can earn 5% in Treasuries risk-free, a 4% cap rate rental may not pencil without appreciation upside.
What is cash on cash return and how is it different from cap rate?
Cash on cash (CoC) return measures your actual cash yield on the cash you invested — it includes your mortgage payments. Formula: CoC = Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow ÷ Total Cash Invested × 100. Total cash invested = down payment + closing costs + initial repairs. Cap rate ignores financing; cash on cash reflects it. Example: same $300K property with 25% down ($75K), 7% mortgage on $225K → annual P&I ≈ $17,964. NOI $14,800 − debt service $17,964 = −$3,164 cash flow. CoC = −4.2% despite a 4.93% cap rate. Leverage cuts both ways.
How do I calculate monthly rental property cash flow?
Monthly Cash Flow = (Annual Gross Rent × (1 − Vacancy Rate) − Annual Operating Expenses − Annual Debt Service) ÷ 12. Operating expenses typically include: property tax (1–2% of value/year), insurance (0.5–1%), maintenance and repairs (1% of value), property management (8–10% of collected rent), and vacancy/credit loss (5–8%). The 50% rule of thumb: expect 50% of gross rent to go to expenses, leaving the other 50% for debt service and profit. If 50% of gross rent doesn't cover your mortgage + profit target, the deal may not work.
What is a good cash on cash return for rental property?
Most investors target 6–10% cash on cash return in 2026. Under 5% is generally considered low unless the property is in a strong appreciation market. Above 10% is excellent but often signals higher risk (lower-quality tenant pool, deferred maintenance, or an emerging market). The benchmark varies by investor: some BRRRR (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) investors target infinite CoC after a full cash-out refinance. Conservative passive investors often accept 5–7% CoC for turnkey properties in A-class neighborhoods.
What is Gross Rent Multiplier (GRM) and how is it used?
GRM = Property Value ÷ Annual Gross Rent. It's a quick filter before running full underwriting. Example: $300K property with $24K annual rent → GRM = 12.5. Lower GRM = better income relative to price. Markets with GRM under 10 are generally landlord-favorable; GRM above 20 often signals speculation over income. GRM does NOT account for expenses, financing, or vacancy — use it only as a first-pass screen. Cap rate and cash on cash return are more rigorous for comparing deals.
What expenses should I include in a rental property calculation?
Include all operating expenses: property taxes (1–2% of value/year), landlord insurance (0.5–1%), maintenance and repairs (1% of value, higher for older properties), property management (8–10% of collected rent if using a manager), vacancy allowance (5–8% of gross rent), CapEx reserve (1–2% of value for roof, HVAC, appliances), HOA (if applicable), lawn/snow/utilities (landlord-paid). Do NOT include mortgage principal and interest when calculating cap rate or NOI — they're financing items, not property expenses. Include them when calculating cash-on-cash return and DSCR.
What is DSCR and why do lenders use it?
Debt Service Coverage Ratio = Net Operating Income ÷ Annual Debt Service. It measures whether the property's income covers the mortgage payments. DSCR of 1.0 = break-even; NOI exactly covers debt. Most lenders require DSCR of 1.20–1.25 (income 20–25% above debt payments) for investment property loans. Example: NOI = $18,000, annual P&I = $15,000 → DSCR = 1.20, which barely meets most lender minimums. DSCR loans (no personal income documentation) have become popular for rental investors — they underwrite the property's income, not yours.
More Free Financial Calculators
Mortgage Calculator
Estimate monthly repayments, interest, and amortisation.
🔄Refinance Calculator
See how much you could save by switching lenders.
📈Compound Interest Calculator
Visualise how your savings grow over time.
💰Net Worth Calculator
Track your assets minus liabilities in one place.
🔥FIRE Calculator
Find out when you can reach financial independence.
💱Currency Converter
Convert between currencies with live exchange rates.
Further Reading
Track Your Finances With Richify AI
Get personalised AI-powered financial insights. Free to download, no ads.
Download Richify — It’s Free