How To Evaluate a Rental Property in 2026
Rental real estate stopped being an automatic moneymaker the moment mortgage rates moved past 6%. At today's rates, most listed properties cash flow negatively after honest expense modeling. Successful investors know which numbers actually matter and which are vanity. The four-number test: cash flow, cap rate, cash-on-cash return, and total return — together they tell you whether a deal works.
The Four Numbers That Decide a Deal
Each measures something different. Use all four:
- Cash flow: monthly rent minus all expenses minus debt service. Target $200+/mo per unit minimum
- Cap rate: net operating income ÷ purchase price. 5%+ in expensive markets, 8%+ in lower-cost markets
- Cash-on-cash return: annual cash flow ÷ cash invested. 6-10% is reasonable in 2026
- Total return: cash flow + principal paydown + appreciation + tax benefits. Real long-term picture
Expenses You Have to Model Honestly
The 50% rule says operating expenses average half of gross rent over time. Investors who model only the obvious bills lose money slowly. The full list:
- Property tax: 1-2.5% of value annually
- Insurance: 0.4-1% of value (higher in coastal/wildfire zones)
- Property management: 8-12% of rent (assume even if self-managing — your time has value)
- Vacancy: 5-8% reserve
- Maintenance reserve: 1% of value annually
- Capital expenses (roof, HVAC, water heater): 1% of value annually
- HOA, utilities not paid by tenant, snow removal, lawn care
When 'Negative Cash Flow' Still Works
Some investors knowingly accept negative monthly cash flow if appreciation and principal paydown are strong enough. This is a defensible strategy in:
- Coastal California, Boston, Seattle — historically 5-7% annual appreciation
- Properties where rent is below market and easy to raise within 12 months
- Properties that need light cosmetic work to support a $300+/mo rent increase
- Tax-bracket investors where depreciation creates paper losses worth more than cash flow
Outside those situations, paying every month to own a 'rental' is just buying a more expensive house with extra steps.
Our ROI calculator runs all four return metrics at once, lets you stress-test rent and vacancy assumptions, and tells you the break-even rent for the deal to work. Analyze your next investment property before the inspection clock runs out.
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