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Cash-on-Cash Return Calculator

See your monthly cash flow and the real return on the cash you invest once a mortgage is in play.

The deal

Edit the example numbers with your own.

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Monthly expenses = taxes, insurance, maintenance, management, vacancy reserve — not the mortgage.

Key takeaways

  • Cash-on-cash = annual pre-tax cash flow ÷ the actual cash you invested.
  • Unlike cap rate, it includes your mortgage — the real return on a financed deal.
  • Many buy-and-hold investors target 8%–12%; cash-flow markets push higher.
  • Leverage cuts both ways: it can lift the return above the cap rate, or turn it negative.

What is cash-on-cash return?

Cash-on-cash return is a property's annual pre-tax cash flow divided by the total cash you put into it, as a percent. Cap rate assumes you pay cash; the moment you use a loan, this is the number that tells you how hard your actual dollars are working.

Cash-on-Cash = (Annual Cash Flow ÷ Total Cash Invested) × 100 Cash Invested = Down Payment + Closing Costs

Worked example

Using the calculator's defaults — a $350,000 property, 25% down at 7% over 30 years, renting for $2,600/month with $700 monthly expenses and $8,000 closing costs:

  • Loan $262,500 → monthly principal & interest ≈ $1,746
  • Monthly cash flow: $2,600 − $700 − $1,746 ≈ $154
  • Annual cash flow: $154 × 12 ≈ $1,843
  • Cash invested: $87,500 down + $8,000 closing = $95,500
  • Cash-on-cash: $1,843 ÷ $95,500 = 1.93%

That thin 1.93% shows how a high rate squeezes a leveraged deal — drop the price or rate, or raise the rent, and the return moves fast.

What's a good cash-on-cash return?

It depends on strategy and market. As a benchmark:

Strategy / marketTypical target
Appreciation-focused metro3% – 6%
Balanced buy-and-hold6% – 9%
Cash-flow market8% – 12%+

A commonly cited rule of thumb is an 8%–12% cash-on-cash target for rentals; appreciation markets justify less. See Investopedia's cash-on-cash return for the underlying definition.

Frequently asked questions

What is a good cash-on-cash return?

Many landlords target 8%–12%, but it varies — appreciation-focused markets may justify less; cash-flow markets often demand 12%+.

Is cash flow the same as profit?

No. Cash flow here is pre-tax and excludes appreciation, loan paydown, and tax benefits — all of which add to your true total return.

How is it different from cap rate?

Cap rate ignores the loan; cash-on-cash includes it and measures return on your invested cash.

Does a bigger down payment help the return?

Not necessarily. More cash down lowers the mortgage (more cash flow) but also raises the cash invested — the two often offset.

Should I include appreciation?

No — cash-on-cash is cash flow only. For appreciation and loan paydown, use the rental property ROI calculator.

What counts as cash invested?

The out-of-pocket cash to close: down payment plus closing costs (and rehab, if any). It excludes the financed loan amount.

Educational tool only. Results are estimates and not financial, tax, or investment advice. Confirm all figures with a licensed professional before transacting.