Landlord Rent Increase Calculator

Calculate allowable rent increases, check tenant affordability, analyze turnover risk, and project your rental income growth.

Rental Details

Increase Analysis

Proposed Increase —/mo
Annual Rent
Gross Yield
Net Yield
Rent-to-Income
Max Allowed $
Legal Status
Increase = New − Old Yield = Annual Rent / Value Net = (Rent − Exp) / Value RTIC = Rent / Income × 100
Your Increase vs. Allowable Cap
0% Cap: —
Tenant Affordability
Enter tenant monthly income above to see affordability analysis.

Scenario Settings

Turnover Break-Even Analysis

If this increase causes your tenant to leave, how long does it take to recoup the vacancy and re-leasing cost?

Turnover Cost
Monthly Gain
Break-Even Point
Enter rent values on the Calculator tab to see analysis.

Bear / Base / Bull

Bear
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Base
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Bull
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Increase % vs. Annual Revenue

Green bars = within allowable cap. Red bars = over cap.

Projection Settings

Projection uses: Proposed new rent as the starting point, compounded annually by the rent growth rate set in Scenario Settings.

Rental Income Projection

Final Annual Rent
Cumulative Revenue
Final Net Yield
Total Net Income
View:
Year Annual Rent Net Income Net Yield

How to Use This Calculator

1
Enter Rent Values — Input your tenant's current monthly rent and your proposed new amount. The increase % and dollar change appear instantly.
2
Select Rent Control Limit — Choose your local rent control framework. The gauge shows whether your increase is within the legal cap for your jurisdiction.
3
Check Affordability — Enter the tenant's monthly income (optional) to see whether the new rent keeps them under the 30% rent-burdened threshold.
4
Analyze Turnover Risk — Switch to Scenario Analysis and use the Break-Even tool: if the tenant leaves, how many months of the new income do you need to cover the vacancy cost?

Key Formulas

Increase % = (New − Old) / Old × 100
Gross Yield = Annual Rent / Property Value × 100
Net Yield = (Annual Rent − Expenses) / Property Value × 100
Rent-to-Income = Monthly Rent / Monthly Income × 100

Key Terms

Gross Rental Yield — Annual rent as a percentage of property value, before expenses.
Net Rental Yield — Annual rent minus expenses, divided by property value. More accurate profitability measure.
Rent Control / Stabilization — Local laws capping annual rent increases, often tied to CPI.
CPI (Consumer Price Index) — Government measure of inflation, used as a benchmark for allowable rent increases.
Rent-to-Income Ratio — Tenant's rent as a percentage of income. >30% is considered rent-burdened.
Turnover Break-Even — The number of months of increased rent needed to recover the cost of vacancy and re-leasing if a tenant leaves.

Real-World Examples

California AB-1482 Increase

A landlord with a $2,400/mo rent in California can increase by CPI + 5%, capped at 10%. At 3.5% CPI, the max increase is $204/mo (8.5%).

Turnover Risk Analysis

A landlord raises rent $200/mo. With 1.5 months of turnover cost ($3,000), it takes 15 months of the new rent to break even — making the increase "borderline" financially.

Tenant Affordability Check

A tenant earns $5,500/mo. A rent increase from $1,600 to $1,750 pushes their rent-to-income from 29% to 31.8% — crossing the 30% rent-burdened threshold.

Complete Guide to Rent Increases for Landlords

Raising rent is one of the most consequential decisions a landlord makes. Done strategically, it maintains investment returns in step with inflation. Done carelessly, it triggers turnover, vacancy costs, and legal challenges.

The Economics of Rent Increases

Rental income is the primary return driver for real estate investors. As property expenses — taxes, insurance, maintenance — increase with inflation, rents must grow to preserve net operating income (NOI) and yield. The gross rental yield formula (annual rent / property value) provides a snapshot, but net yield after expenses is the true profitability measure.

How Rent Control Works

Over 200 U.S. cities have rent control or stabilization laws. California's AB-1482 caps increases at 5% + local CPI, maximum 10%, for buildings more than 15 years old. Oregon caps increases at 7% + CPI. New York's Rent Stabilization Law covers ~1 million NYC apartments with annual increases set by the Rent Guidelines Board. Always verify your local rules — penalties for violations can include rent rollbacks, fines, and liability for tenant damages.

The Turnover Math Landlords Overlook

A rent increase that triggers tenant departure often costs more in the short term than it gains. Typical turnover costs — cleaning, repairs, advertising, broker fees, and vacancy — equal 1.5–2 months of rent. A $150/mo increase with 6-week vacancy effectively costs you money in year 1. Use the Turnover Break-Even tool on the Scenario Analysis tab to model this precisely before deciding.

Notice Requirements

Most states require 30 days written notice for increases under 10% and 90 days for larger increases. California requires 90 days for any increase. Always send notice via certified mail and retain a copy.

Tenant Affordability and Retention

The 30% rent-to-income rule is a widely-used affordability standard: households spending more than 30% of gross income on rent are considered rent-burdened. At 50%+, they are severely rent-burdened. Pushing a tenant past this threshold increases the probability of non-payment, unit damage, and early termination.

Tax Implications

Rental income is ordinary income, taxed at your marginal federal rate plus state income tax. However, depreciation deductions (residential: 27.5-year straight-line on the building value) significantly reduce taxable rental income. A $400,000 property with $320,000 in building basis generates $11,636/year in depreciation deductions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much can I legally increase rent?

It depends on your state and city. Without rent control, there's typically no legal cap. With rent control (e.g. California AB-1482), the cap is 5% + local CPI, maximum 10%. Oregon caps at 7% + CPI. New York Rent Stabilized buildings follow annual RGB rates. Always verify local law.

How much notice must I give before raising rent?

Most states require 30 days for increases under 10% and 60–90 days for larger increases. California requires 90 days for any increase. Notice must typically be in writing; certified mail is recommended.

What is a reasonable annual rent increase?

3–5% annually is considered moderate and aligns with typical inflation. This maintains real value without dramatically increasing tenant burden. Increases above 10% carry higher turnover risk.

What is gross vs. net rental yield?

Gross yield = Annual rent / Property value. Net yield = (Annual rent − Annual expenses) / Property value. Net yield is a more accurate profitability measure, typically 2–4% lower than gross yield.

What does the rent-to-income ratio mean?

The 30% rule holds that housing costs should not exceed 30% of gross income. Above 30% is rent-burdened; above 50% is severely rent-burdened. Tenants at these thresholds have higher non-payment and early termination risk.

Can I raise rent during an active lease?

Generally no — a fixed-term lease locks in rent for the lease period. Increases take effect at renewal. Month-to-month tenancies can be changed with proper notice (typically 30 days).

What does CPI + 5% mean in California?

California's AB-1482 allows increases up to 5% plus the local Consumer Price Index (CPI), with an absolute maximum of 10%. If CPI is 3.5%, the maximum allowed increase is 8.5%.

How do vacancy costs compare to rent increases?

A typical vacancy + turnover costs 1.5–2 months of rent (cleaning, repairs, advertising, leasing). An aggressive rent increase causing 6 weeks of vacancy often yields less net income in year 1 than a moderate increase that retains the tenant. Use the Turnover Break-Even tool to model this for your specific situation.

Is rental income taxed differently than wages?

Rental income is ordinary income, taxed at your marginal rate. However, depreciation deductions (27.5-year straight-line on building value) can significantly reduce taxable rental income, often making the effective tax rate lower than your marginal rate.

What are the penalties for illegal rent increases?

In rent-controlled jurisdictions, illegal increases can result in rent rollbacks to the last legal amount, fines up to $10,000+, and liability for tenant damages including attorney fees. Some cities allow tenants to sue for triple damages on overcharges.

Should I raise rent every year?

Annual increases matching inflation (3–4%) are generally best practice. They normalize increases, preserve real value, and avoid the shock of a large catch-up increase after several flat years.

What is the 1% rule in real estate?

The 1% rule states monthly rent should equal at least 1% of the purchase price (e.g. $2,000/mo on a $200,000 property). It's a quick screening tool, not a guarantee of profitability.

How does rent growth affect property value?

For income-producing properties, value is often calculated using a capitalization rate: Value = NOI / Cap Rate. Increasing rent by $200/mo ($2,400/yr) in a market with a 5% cap rate theoretically adds $48,000 to property value.

What if my property is below market rent?

If significantly below market (20%+), a phased approach over 2–3 years minimizes turnover risk while correcting the gap. Offering lease extensions in exchange for catch-up increases gives tenants stability while improving your return.

Do I need to justify a rent increase?

In most non-rent-controlled jurisdictions, no justification is required. In some rent-controlled areas, landlords must document reasons such as increased costs or capital improvements to seek above-guideline increases.