Rental Yield Calculator

Calculate gross rental yield, net rental yield, and cash-on-cash yield to evaluate the income potential of your investment property. Compare different yield metrics to get a complete picture of your property's performance.

Property Financials
Enter your property income and expenses

$400,000

$36,000

$8,000

$18,000

Yield Analysis
Multiple yield perspectives
Gross Rental Yield

9.00%

Good

Net Rental Yield

7.00%

Excellent

Cash Flow Yield

2.50%

After all costs

Annual Breakdown:

Rental Income:+$36,000
Operating Expenses:-$8,000
Net Operating Income:$28,000
Mortgage Payment:-$18,000
Annual Cash Flow:$10,000

Typical Benchmarks:

Gross Yield:7-10%
Net Yield:5-7%
Cash Flow Yield:3-5%
Understanding Rental Yield

Rental yield measures the annual return on a rental property investment as a percentage of the property's value. There are three main types of rental yield, each providing different insights into your investment's performance.

Types of Rental Yield

1. Gross Rental Yield

The simplest calculation that shows total rental income as a percentage of property value, before any expenses. Useful for quick comparisons but doesn't reflect actual profitability.

Gross Yield = (Annual Rent ÷ Property Value) × 100

2. Net Rental Yield

A more realistic measure that accounts for operating expenses like property tax, insurance, maintenance, and management fees. This shows your actual operating profit as a percentage of property value.

Net Yield = ((Annual Rent - Expenses) ÷ Property Value) × 100

3. Cash Flow Yield

The most comprehensive measure that includes mortgage payments, showing your actual cash return after all costs. This is the true measure of cash-on-cash return for leveraged properties.

Cash Flow Yield = ((Rent - Expenses - Mortgage) ÷ Property Value) × 100

Why Rental Yield Matters

  • Performance Comparison: Compare different properties on an apples-to-apples basis
  • Market Analysis: Understand if yields are competitive in your market
  • Investment Strategy: Decide between cash flow vs appreciation focused properties
  • Portfolio Management: Identify underperforming assets that need attention

Regional Variations

Rental yields vary significantly by market. High-growth coastal cities often have lower yields (3-5%) but strong appreciation, while Midwest and Southern markets may offer higher yields (7-10%) with moderate appreciation. Consider both yield and appreciation potential when evaluating markets.

Pro Tip: Don't rely solely on rental yield. A complete investment analysis should also consider appreciation potential, market trends, property condition, tenant quality, and your overall investment goals. High yield with declining property values may be worse than moderate yield with strong appreciation.