Rental Yield and Cap Rate Explained
Rental yield and capitalization rate (cap rate) are two foundational metrics used to evaluate the income-generating performance of rental properties. This page explains how each metric is defined, how the calculations work, where the two measures diverge, and what those differences mean for property selection and portfolio analysis. Understanding both figures is essential context for anyone studying the rental property investment basics that drive decision-making in the U.S. rental market.
Definition and scope
Rental yield expresses annual rental income as a percentage of a property's value or purchase price. It measures how much income a property generates relative to its cost, before accounting for financing.
Capitalization rate (cap rate) expresses net operating income (NOI) as a percentage of a property's current market value. Unlike yield, cap rate strips out financing entirely and focuses on the asset's unlevered income performance.
Both metrics apply across residential rental vs. commercial rental contexts, though their interpretive benchmarks differ significantly between asset classes. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS Publication 527) and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) do not mandate a specific yield or cap rate threshold, but real estate appraisers operating under Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP), administered by The Appraisal Foundation, routinely use cap rate as a primary income-approach input when valuing income-producing properties.
Gross rental yield and net rental yield represent the two main variants within the yield family:
- Gross rental yield = (Annual gross rent ÷ Property value) × 100
- Net rental yield = ((Annual gross rent − Annual operating expenses) ÷ Property value) × 100
The gap between gross and net yield can easily span 2–4 percentage points once vacancy allowances, insurance, maintenance, and property management fees are factored in.
How it works
Calculating rental yield
A property purchased for $350,000 that generates $24,000 in annual gross rent produces a gross rental yield of 6.86%. If annual operating costs total $7,000, the net rental yield drops to approximately 4.86%.
Step-by-step gross yield calculation:
- Determine annual gross rent (monthly rent × 12).
- Divide annual gross rent by the property's purchase price or current market value.
- Multiply by 100 to express as a percentage.
Step-by-step net yield calculation:
- Subtract total annual operating expenses from annual gross rent to derive net income.
- Divide net income by property value.
- Multiply by 100.
Calculating cap rate
Cap rate uses NOI — revenue minus operating expenses, excluding debt service and depreciation — divided by current market value.
Formula: Cap Rate = (NOI ÷ Current Market Value) × 100
Using the same property: if NOI is $17,000 and market value is $350,000, the cap rate is 4.86%. In this simplified example, net yield and cap rate converge because no financing was assumed. When a property carries a mortgage, yield calculations on an equity basis diverge sharply from cap rate.
The National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) tracks cap rates across property sectors in the NCREIF Property Index, providing publicly referenced benchmarks. Apartment sector cap rates reported in NCREIF data have historically ranged from 4% to 6% in major markets, while industrial properties in the same periods have traded closer to 5%–7%.
For a deeper look at how income and expense line items feed these calculations, see rental property cash flow analysis.
Common scenarios
Scenario 1 — Single-family residential
A single-family home in a secondary market purchased for $200,000 rents for $1,600/month ($19,200/year). After $4,800 in operating expenses, NOI is $14,400. Cap rate: 7.2%. Gross yield: 9.6%. The spread between gross yield and cap rate — 2.4 percentage points — represents the expense load.
Scenario 2 — Multifamily apartment building
A 12-unit building acquired for $1.8 million generates $180,000 in annual gross rents. Operating expenses, including property management fees averaging 8%–10% of collected rent, total $72,000. NOI = $108,000. Cap rate = 6.0%. Gross yield = 10.0%. The large gap reflects the higher operating cost burden typical of multifamily rental properties.
Scenario 3 — Short-term rental
A property generating short-term rental income through platforms subject to vacation rental regulations by state may show high gross yield but compressed net yield due to elevated cleaning costs, platform fees (typically 3%–5% for hosts on major platforms per published fee schedules), and higher vacancy seasonality. Cap rate may understate risk here because market value can reflect short-term premium pricing.
Decision boundaries
Yield and cap rate serve distinct analytical functions, and conflating them leads to mispriced investment decisions.
| Metric | Uses financing in calc? | Uses market value or purchase price? | Best use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross rental yield | No | Either | Quick initial screen |
| Net rental yield | No | Either | Expense-adjusted income check |
| Cap rate | No | Market value only | Asset valuation; market comparison |
| Cash-on-cash return | Yes | Equity invested | Leveraged return analysis |
When cap rate is the appropriate metric: Comparing two properties in the same market where financing structures differ. Cap rate isolates the asset's performance independent of how it is funded.
When net yield is more practical: Evaluating a single acquisition where the purchase price is fixed and the buyer wants a quick income-to-cost ratio before modeling full NOI.
Threshold interpretation: There is no universal "good" cap rate. Urban core multifamily assets in high-demand metros trade at compressed cap rates (3.5%–5%) reflecting lower risk and higher price appreciation expectations. Secondary and tertiary market assets may trade at 7%–9% (NCREIF Property Index sector data).
Tax treatment of rental income interacts with these metrics in non-trivial ways. Depreciation deductions under IRS Publication 527 and passive activity loss rules (covered in detail at passive activity loss rules for rental income) can materially shift after-tax yield relative to pre-tax cap rate. Similarly, rental property tax deductions that reduce taxable income do not affect cap rate calculations, which operate on pre-tax NOI.
Investors using these metrics to screen assets should also reference how to evaluate a rental property for a structured due diligence framework that integrates yield and cap rate alongside qualitative factors.
References
- IRS Publication 527 — Residential Rental Property — Internal Revenue Service; income, expense, and depreciation rules for rental property owners.
- National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) — NCREIF Property Index — Benchmark cap rate and return data by property sector.
- The Appraisal Foundation — Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) — Professional standards governing income-approach valuation methods including cap rate application.
- Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) — Accounting Standards Codification — Standards relevant to reporting of investment property income and valuation.
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) — Multifamily Housing — Federal framework for multifamily rental underwriting standards used in government-backed financing.