Commercial Real Estate Cap Rate Calculator
Resulting Capitalization Rate:
How to Calculate Cap Rate for Commercial Properties
In commercial real estate, the Capitalization Rate (or Cap Rate) is the most popular metric used to assess the profitability and return potential of an investment property. It represents the yield of a property over a one-year time horizon assuming the property is purchased with cash.
The Cap Rate Formula
Cap Rate = (Net Operating Income / Current Market Value) × 100
Key Components of the Calculation
- Net Operating Income (NOI): This is the total income generated by the property (rent, parking fees, laundry, etc.) minus all necessary operating expenses. Note: Debt service (mortgage payments) is NOT included in the NOI calculation.
- Current Market Value: This is the present-day value of the asset or the price at which the property is being purchased.
Practical Example
Imagine you are looking at an office building priced at $2,000,000. After reviewing the financial statements, you see the property generates $250,000 in gross rent. However, it costs $50,000 per year in taxes, insurance, and maintenance.
- Calculate NOI: $250,000 – $50,000 = $200,000.
- Divide NOI by Value: $200,000 / $2,000,000 = 0.10.
- Multiply by 100: 10% Cap Rate.
What is a "Good" Cap Rate?
There is no single "correct" cap rate. Generally, a higher cap rate indicates a higher potential return but also suggests higher risk (e.g., an older building in a struggling neighborhood). A lower cap rate usually indicates a safer investment in a "Class A" location with stable tenants but a slower return on capital.
Limitations to Consider
While useful, the cap rate should not be the only metric you use. It does not account for:
- Future appreciation or depreciation of the property.
- Tax benefits or depreciation write-offs.
- The cost of financing (interest rates).
- Variable vacancy rates over long periods.