Key Terms
- Cap Rate
- Capitalization Rate — the ratio of NOI to property value. Used to compare properties regardless of financing structure.
- NOI
- Net Operating Income — gross rental income minus vacancy loss and all operating expenses, before debt service.
- Cash-on-Cash (CoC)
- The annual pre-tax cash flow divided by the total cash invested (down payment + closing costs). Reflects actual leveraged returns.
- DSCR
- Debt Service Coverage Ratio — measures how many times the NOI can cover the annual mortgage payment. A key metric for lenders.
- LTV (Loan-to-Value)
- The percentage of the purchase price financed by the mortgage. Higher LTV means more leverage but also more risk.
- Yield-on-Cost
- NOI divided by total acquisition cost (price + closing + repairs). A more conservative measure than standard cap rate.
- Effective Gross Income (EGI)
- Gross potential rent plus other income, minus vacancy and collection losses. The realistic top-line revenue.
- GRM (Gross Rent Multiplier)
- Purchase price divided by annual gross rent. Lower GRM suggests better value; typical range is 8–15×.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Single-Family Rental
Scenario: Purchase price $300,000, monthly rent $2,500, 5% vacancy, $9,200/year expenses.
Gross Income: $2,500 × 12 = $30,000
EGI: $30,000 × (1 − 0.05) = $28,500
NOI: $28,500 − $9,200 = $19,300
Cap Rate: $19,300 / $300,000 = 6.43%
Example 2: Cash-on-Cash with Leverage
Same property: 75% LTV, 7% rate, 30-year amortization.
Loan: $225,000 → Monthly P&I: $1,496 → Annual: $17,952
Cash Flow: $19,300 − $17,952 = $1,348/year
Cash Invested: $75,000 + $9,000 closing = $84,000
CoC Return: $1,348 / $84,000 = 1.60% (negative leverage — rate exceeds cap)
Example 3: Maximum Offer Price
Scenario: Target 7% cap rate, NOI of $19,300.
Max Price: $19,300 / 0.07 = $275,714
Insight: To achieve a 7% cap, you would need to negotiate $24,286 below the $300,000 asking price.
Cap Rate by Property Type
| Property Type | Typical Cap Rate | Risk Level | Typical Vacancy | Notes |
| Class A Multifamily | 4.0 – 5.5% | Low | 3-5% | Core urban locations, new construction |
| Class B Multifamily | 5.5 – 7.0% | Medium | 5-8% | Value-add opportunities, suburban |
| Single-Family Rental | 5.0 – 8.0% | Medium | 5-10% | Varies widely by market |
| Retail / Strip Mall | 6.0 – 9.0% | Medium-High | 5-15% | Tenant quality critical |
| Industrial / Warehouse | 5.0 – 7.5% | Low-Medium | 3-7% | Growing demand, long leases |
| Office | 6.0 – 10.0% | High | 10-25% | Remote work impact, market dependent |
Understanding Cap Rate in Real Estate Investing
What Cap Rate Really Tells You
The capitalization rate is the most widely used metric in commercial real estate for comparing investment properties. It strips away financing variables to show the pure, unleveraged yield of a property based on its net operating income relative to its price. A property with a 6% cap rate generates $6 of NOI for every $100 of value. This simplicity makes cap rates invaluable for quick comparisons across different properties, markets, and asset classes.
Cap Rate vs Cash-on-Cash: When to Use Each
Cap rate and cash-on-cash return answer different questions. Cap rate tells you about the property's intrinsic yield regardless of how it is financed. Cash-on-cash tells you what return your actual invested dollars are earning after debt service. In a low-interest-rate environment where mortgage rates are below the cap rate (positive leverage), CoC will exceed the cap rate. When rates rise above the cap rate (negative leverage), CoC drops below it — sometimes dramatically. Savvy investors track both metrics to understand their true risk exposure.
The Role of DSCR in Deal Analysis
The Debt Service Coverage Ratio is a critical metric for both investors and lenders. A DSCR of 1.25x means the property generates 25% more income than needed to cover the mortgage — providing a safety cushion for vacancies or unexpected expenses. Most commercial lenders require a minimum DSCR of 1.20 to 1.25. Properties with lower ratios may still be viable investments, but they carry more risk if income dips even slightly.
Using Target Analysis for Acquisitions
The reverse-engineering approach — setting a target cap rate and calculating the maximum offer price — is how institutional investors structure their bids. By determining the price at which a property meets their minimum return threshold, buyers can negotiate with confidence. If the asking price implies a 5% cap rate but your target is 7%, you know exactly how much discount you need. This mathematical approach removes emotion from negotiation and keeps acquisitions disciplined.