How to Calculate Cash Flow on a Rental Property

Updated 2026 · PropVision

Cash flow is the money left over each month after the property pays for itself. It's the number that decides whether a rental feeds you or bleeds you. Here's exactly how to calculate it — including the expenses most beginners forget.

The formula

Monthly Cash Flow = Rental Income − ALL Expenses (including the mortgage)

Step 1: Income

Start with realistic monthly rent (use comps, don't guess high). Add any extra income — parking, laundry, pet fees.

Step 2: Subtract every expense

This is where deals get killed. Don't forget:

Example: $2,000 rent − $1,100 mortgage − $250 taxes − $80 insurance − $120 vacancy − $150 maintenance − $0 HOA = +$300/month cash flow.

The trap that bankrupts beginners

New investors calculate "rent minus mortgage" and think they're cash-flowing $900. Then vacancy, repairs, and CapEx hit — and the real number is negative. Always budget the hidden expenses. A deal that only works if nothing ever breaks is not a deal.

How much cash flow is good?

Many investors target $100–$200+ per unit per month after all expenses. Pair cash flow with cash-on-cash return and cap rate for the full picture.

Calculate it instantly

PropVision runs the full cash-flow math (with realistic expense assumptions) on any address in about 10 seconds.

Analyze any property free →

Keep reading

What's a Good Cap Rate?
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