How to Calculate Numbers on a Rental Property - YouTube

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Welcome to Hipster's first how-to video!
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I'm going to show you how to run very quick numbers on a rental property. You
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can use this formula—so easy and so fast
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—for any property you're looking at. It's so straightforward.
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I'm going to do it on this little whiteboard here and
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use my calculator. (Yes,
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it is actually that large). I'll be behind the scenes here doing my
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calculations
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while I write out what is going on.
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I'm using an actual rental property as an example.
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It has a purchase price (you have to love my handwriting)
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of $100,000.00.
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In rent (and always verify this before you buy any property. Verify it with
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property managers
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or… just verify it), this particular house gets $1075.00 in rent.
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This house is in Indianapolis. It was built in
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2002, I think. Super-cute little house. Three bedroom, 2 bath.
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But all we care about right now are the numbers.
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I'm looking at this property. What do I want to take into consideration?
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I write out my list of things that I need numbers for first:
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taxes, insurance (again,
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don't you love my handwriting), I always make an estimate for vacancies
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and repairs (which I'll touch base on in a second),
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and then for me I always use property management so
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I have that line. That may be optional. For sure, you're going to have taxes and insurance.
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Vacancies and repairs are really up for your best guess.
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I buy turnkeys so they're already rehabbed. I use
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7% for vacancies. You can look up the statistics of a particular
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city
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and see if that number is about right. And for repairs, like I said, fully rehabbed, so I
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just use 5% for repairs.
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If you calculate this, this particular house the taxes per month
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(and this is all monthly) are about $60.00 a month, which is excellent.
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Insurance on this property is about $45.00. Seven percent (and those percentages are
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of the monthly rent) of that is going to be $75.00.
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Repairs are going to be 5% which is $54.00.
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The property management in this case is 10%
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(should've put that there), and that would equal about $108.00.
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Total all those up. These are going to be all your expenses.
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Grand total: $342 for monthly expenses.
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Now, here's your income: $1075.00.
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Here are your expenses: $342.00. So do $1075.00
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minus $342.00 and if you buy this property for all cash
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in theory per month you should be getting $733.00.
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That is cash flow in your pocket per month.
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To calculate your cap rate, you are going to do
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$733.00 times 12 (because you want it annually)
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and the total amount that you paid for this house is
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$100,000.00, which is going to equal…
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calculations…8796
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divided by 100,000…you're going to get
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0.088,
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which equals 8.8%. This is your cap rate.
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That is the main number.
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That's going to explain to you kind of where the income is in relation to
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where the income is in relation to how much you paid for the property
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I know you're already asking (and I don't even have an eraser…
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let's see…hang on),
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I know you're already asking "Well, what if I'm financing
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because I've got a mortgage?" Ok. Not a problem. Let's erase
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this stuff. You already know your expenses. We're going to get rid this section.
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We'll leave that $324.00 for total expenses.
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(I guess I could've written a little smaller.)
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How do you deal with the mortgage?
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Well, $342.00 was your total expenses without a mortgage.
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All you need to do now is figure out what your mortgage payment per month is
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going to be.
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Go online, find any old mortgage online calculator, plug in the numbers and see
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what your payment is going to be.
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For this one, I used a 5% interest rate, and
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with 20% down (which is standard for
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an investment property), you're going to have a loan of $80,000.00 (that's an $80K loan).
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Your mortgage payment at a 5% interest rate is going to be $429.00
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per month. Since the total expenses were $342.00 already,
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just add those to $429.00.
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This will be your new expenses…
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(am I doing that right?) $771.00.
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Yeah so now you have
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Now you have $1075.00
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minus $771.00 is going to give you
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$304.00 per month. This is your new net income
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after the mortgage payment. On this house, you're still bringing home
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$304.00 per month,
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which is ridiculous for a rental property. That's amazing!
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That's $300 easy in your pocket per month.
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The only thing you can do other than this is…
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you already have your cap rate…now you want to calculate your cash-on-cash
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return
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which ultimately for any purchase is all that matters. Cap rates only explain
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whether you're getting a good price for the property or not. Your cash-on-cash
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is actually how much you're making
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based on how much money you put into the deal.
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So, $304.00…
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make it annual, so times 12.
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Then, instead of using your total purchase price, you want to put in
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how much money you actually put into the deal.
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Your down payment on a $100,000.00 house was probably $20,000.
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thousand dollars
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I went ahead and rounded that up to $25,000 because you're probably going to have about
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$5000.00 in closing cost.
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That's going to give you
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3648 divided by 25,000
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equals 0.1459.
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Change that to a percentage and you are looking at a 14.6%
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cash-on-cash return.
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That is the number that you care about. If you are paying all cash for the
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property
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all you care about is this 8.8%, because your cap rate and your cash-on-cash will be
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the same for an all-cash buy.
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For a finance buy (and this explains perfectly why I'm such a fan of leveraging money
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as much as possible),
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you're making almost 15% return on your money…
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on your actual cash that you invest. That's
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amazing! With real estate prices gone up how they have,
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to be able to make a 15% cash-on-cash is great. This is a fully rehabbed
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house.
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Tenants are in it. Property managers are in place. The only work it took was for you to
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sign the papers and get a home inspection.
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Boom! There are your numbers. A very quick summary…
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We'll see if I can erase this super fast.
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I'm not even going to try and erase it all. I'll even do it in blue since I'm holding a blue marker here.
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Step ONE: Calculate
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your expenses. As a recap, that's going to be your taxes,
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insurance, property management fees, and
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estimate for vacancy and repairs, and then if you have the mortgage,
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the mortgage expenses.
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You already know your income, so TWO: take your income
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minus your expenses and that will equal your net
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cash flow. Don't ever buy a property that does not
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tell you that you're going to get a positive…Let's see…
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What did I say? Don't ever buy a property that suggests you're going to make a negative cash flow.
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You always, always want positive.
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THREE: Calculate the cap rate,
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which is your net income,
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times 12, divided by purchase price.
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FOUR: If you're financing calculate
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your cash-on-cash…
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which is your
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net with the financing,
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times 12, divided by your cash in.
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As a clarification point, the cap rate does not include
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any financing cost. Your mortgage expense is not included in the expenses.
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It has nothing to do with the equation. That is standard. Cap rates do not
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include financing. It's assuming an all-cash purchase, because
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whether you finance or not (I like to say) is your own problem.
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It has nothing to do with the purchase price. What matters for you financers
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is the cash-on-cash, which does in fact take into account the mortgage expense.
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That will calculate your official return.
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Alright? That's easy rental property numbers. Another…one last disclaimer…
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this does not include rehabs.
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If you're rehabbing a property you have got to include those costs in these equations.
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It takes a couple of extra steps. It's still not a big deal.
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In general… a general formula for you.
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I hope it helps!