Step-by-Step Guide

How to Calculate Cash Flow on a Rental Property

Most landlords find out their rental property doesn't cash flow the way they expected about three months after closing. That's when the first insurance bill arrives, the property manager takes their cut, and the water heater decides it's done. None of that has to be a surprise.

10 min read Updated June 2025 Informational only — not financial or investment advice
Table of Contents
  1. What Rental Property Cash Flow Actually Means
  2. Step 1: Start With Gross Rental Income
  3. Step 2: Apply a Vacancy Allowance
  4. Step 3: Calculate Your Operating Expenses
  5. Step 4: Calculate Net Operating Income (NOI)
  6. Step 5: Subtract Your Mortgage Payment
  7. Step 6: Evaluate the Return — Cash-on-Cash
  8. Cash Flow Calculator — Free Tool
  9. What Counts as Good Cash Flow?
  10. FAQ

What Rental Property Cash Flow Actually Means

Cash flow is the money left over each month after every dollar going out has been accounted for. Not rent minus mortgage. Not rent minus mortgage and taxes. Every dollar out — including the ones that don't show up on a listing sheet.

Positive cash flow means the property puts money in your pocket each month. Negative cash flow means you're subsidizing the property. Both can be part of a legitimate investment strategy — but only if you know which one you're dealing with before you buy.

The formula looks simple:

The Cash Flow Formula
Cash Flow = Gross Rental Income − All Expenses (including debt service)
The formula is simple. The challenge is building the expense side honestly. That's where most investors — especially early on — cut corners, usually by accident.

The 6-Step Process

1
Gross Rental Income
Market rent — verified against local comps, not the current lease
2
Subtract Vacancy Allowance
5–10% of gross rent → Effective Gross Income (EGI)
3
Subtract Operating Expenses
Taxes, insurance, management, maintenance, CapEx reserves, HOA
4
= Net Operating Income (NOI)
EGI minus all operating costs — before debt service. This is the cap rate input.
5
Subtract Mortgage Payment
P&I only — this produces your monthly cash flow number
6
Calculate Cash-on-Cash Return
Annual cash flow ÷ total cash invested → contextualizes the return as a %

Step 1: Start With Gross Rental Income

Your starting point is the monthly rent the property generates — or would generate at current market rates. If the property is tenanted, verify the rent against local comps. A seller-occupied property or one with a long-term below-market tenant will need a rent adjustment before your numbers mean anything.

For a small multifamily, add up all units and use market rent, not what the current lease says:

That's your ceiling. Everything from here reduces it.

Step 2: Apply a Vacancy Allowance

No property stays 100% occupied indefinitely. A standard vacancy allowance for most US markets is 5–10% of gross rent. Use the higher end for C-class properties or markets with less demand.

Using 8% on $3,450/month: $3,450 × 0.08 = $276/month vacancy → Effective Gross Income: $3,174/month

This isn't pessimism. It's what the property will realistically collect when averaged across a full year.

Step 3: Calculate Your Operating Expenses

This is where cash flow calculations live or die. Work through each category carefully — these are the numbers sellers and listing agents consistently leave out.

🏛️
Property Taxes
$380/mo
Pull the actual bill from the county assessor. Some states reassess on sale — your bill may jump at closing.
🛡️
Insurance
$140/mo
Get a landlord insurance quote before you close. $100–$175/mo is a rough range — actual quotes vary widely by property.
🔑
Property Management
$317/mo
8–12% of collected rent. Model it even if self-managing — your time has value and this protects the analysis.
🔧
Maintenance & Repairs
$267/mo
1% of property value annually ($320k × 1% = $3,200/yr ÷ 12). Covers routine items — not major CapEx.
🏗️
CapEx Reserves
$267/mo
1–1.5% of value annually. Roof, HVAC, water heater, flooring. These aren't if costs — they're when costs.
🌿
Misc / Landscaping
$75/mo
HOA fees, lawn care, snow removal, trash, pest control — add any line items specific to your property.

⚠️ CapEx reserves are the most skipped line item. A $9,000 roof replacement doesn't care that you're three months into ownership. Budget for it before you close.

Related: How to Estimate Rental Property Operating Costs Before You Buy →

Steps 4 & 5: NOI and Cash Flow — The Full Waterfall

Once you have your expenses, the calculation flows in a straight line from gross rent down to monthly cash flow. Here's the complete picture for the three-unit example.

💵 Cash Flow Waterfall — 3-Unit Property
$320,000 purchase · 25% down · 7.25% rate / 30yr
💰
Gross Monthly Rent (3 units)
$3,450
📭
Less: Vacancy Allowance (8%)
− $276
📊
Effective Gross Income (EGI)
$3,174
🏛️
Less: Property Taxes
− $380
🛡️
Less: Insurance
− $140
🔑
Less: Property Management (10%)
− $317
🔧
Less: Maintenance (1%/yr)
− $267
🏗️
Less: CapEx Reserves (1%/yr)
− $267
🌿
Less: Misc / Landscaping
− $75
📈
Net Operating Income (NOI)
$1,728
🏦
Less: Monthly Mortgage (P&I)
− $1,637
💵
Monthly Cash Flow
$91

⚠️ $91/month is thin. One unexpected repair wipes out months of margin. This is exactly the kind of number you want to know before you make an offer. At this price and rate, you'd want to negotiate the purchase price down, find a higher-rent property, or accept the thin margins because appreciation or loan paydown justify the strategy.

Step 6: Evaluate the Return — Cash-on-Cash

Cash flow tells you the monthly dollar amount. Cash-on-cash return contextualizes it as a percentage of what you actually deployed.

Cash-on-Cash Return = (Annual Cash Flow ÷ Total Cash Invested) × 100

For this deal: down payment ($80,000) + closing costs (~$9,600) = $89,600 total cash in. Annual cash flow: $91 × 12 = $1,092.

$1,092 ÷ $89,600 × 100 = 1.22% cash-on-cash return

That's a low return on deployed capital. Many experienced investors target 6–10%+. Here's how that compares:

Negative
Below 0%
Losing cash monthly. Needs a clear appreciation thesis to justify.
Thin
0–4%
Positive but fragile. One expense event erases months of gain.
Acceptable
4–8%
Solid foundation. Most experienced investors target this range.
Strong
8%+
Excellent return on invested capital. Typically secondary markets at higher yields.

Related: Cash-on-Cash Return vs. Cap Rate: Which Metric Should Drive Your Decision? →

💵
Cash Flow Calculator
Free · Instant · No sign-up
Full tool →

What Counts as Good Cash Flow on a Rental Property?

The old rule of thumb is the 1% rule: monthly rent should equal at least 1% of the purchase price. On a $320,000 property, you'd want $3,200/month in rent. In most US markets right now, that's a high bar to clear.

A more practical benchmark: aim for $100–$200 net cash flow per unit per month as a minimum threshold. That's modest but meaningful — it keeps the property from costing you money and builds in a small buffer.

How interest rates reshape the entire calculation

The mortgage payment is often the single biggest variable in cash flow — and it swings dramatically with rate changes. Here's what a $240,000 loan looks like at different rates:

Interest Rate Monthly P&I Monthly Cash Flow
5.00% $1,288/mo +$440
6.00% $1,439/mo +$289
7.00% $1,597/mo +$131
7.25% $1,637/mo +$91
7.50% $1,678/mo +$50
8.00% $1,760/mo − $32

The difference between 5% and 7.25% on this loan is $349/month — the difference between a strong cash flowing deal and a barely-breaking-even one. Always model at current market rates, not historical averages.

Run Your Numbers Before the Market Runs Ahead of You

In a competitive market, the temptation is to move fast and figure out the details later. Don't. The calculation above takes 20 minutes with accurate inputs. The cash flow calculator above does it in seconds — plug in your property's rent, expenses, and loan terms to see monthly cash flow, NOI, and cash-on-cash return side by side.

Know your numbers. Then make your move.

FAQ: Rental Property Cash Flow Questions

What expenses do most investors forget when calculating cash flow?
The two biggest omissions are capital expenditure reserves and vacancy allowance. Both represent real, recurring costs that don't show up on a seller's pro forma — but absolutely show up in your bank account over time. CapEx reserves cover roof, HVAC, water heater, and flooring replacements. Vacancy accounts for the months between tenants.
Should I calculate cash flow before or after tax?
Most cash flow analysis is done pre-tax because tax treatment varies widely depending on your income, filing status, depreciation schedule, and entity structure. Pre-tax cash flow is the standard baseline. Work with a CPA to understand your post-tax position once you've already identified a deal worth pursuing.
Is negative cash flow ever acceptable on an investment property?
Yes, in certain strategies. Investors in high-appreciation markets sometimes accept short-term negative cash flow in exchange for equity growth. The key is knowing the number precisely and having the liquidity to sustain it. Accidental negative cash flow is a problem. Intentional negative cash flow with a clear exit strategy is a business decision.
How does interest rate affect cash flow calculations?
Significantly. At 5% vs. 7.25% on a $240,000 loan, the difference in monthly payment is roughly $349. That's often the difference between positive and negative cash flow. Always model cash flow at current market rates, not historical ones. The rate-impact table above illustrates this clearly for this specific deal.
How often should I recalculate cash flow on properties I already own?
At least annually — ideally whenever rents, taxes, insurance, or your loan structure changes. Knowing your current cash flow position on existing properties is just as important as underwriting new ones. A property that cash flowed at purchase may not cash flow the same way five years later if expenses have grown faster than rents.
Free — no account required

Know Your Numbers Before You Make an Offer

Twenty minutes of honest math now versus months of negative cash flow later isn't a hard trade-off. Run your deal through the cash flow calculator — monthly cash flow, NOI, and cash-on-cash return, instantly.

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