Real Estate ROI
The overall profit a property investment generates, measured using several different methods depending on what you are trying to find out.
Real estate ROI (return on investment) is the general term for how much money a property investment makes you, expressed as a percentage of what you put into it. Unlike a number you calculate once and move on, real estate ROI actually covers several different methods, each answering a slightly different question. A landlord in Sydney tracking monthly rental income, an investor in Chicago renovating a house to resell, and a family in Bengaluru buying a flat for retirement are all asking about "ROI," but they often mean different things by it. Knowing which version of ROI you actually need is the first step to using it well.
The simplest version, often called asset ROI, divides your annual net profit by the property's purchase price. If a property bought for USD 300,000 generates USD 24,000 in net profit each year after expenses, its asset ROI is 8%. This version treats the property as if it were bought entirely in cash, which makes it useful for comparing properties side by side regardless of how each one was financed.
Cash-on-cash return is the metric most investors who use a mortgage actually care about, because it measures return against the cash you really spent, not the full purchase price. If you put down GBP 60,000 on a GBP 300,000 property and financed the rest, your cash-on-cash return divides your annual profit by that GBP 60,000, not the full price. Because borrowing magnifies returns, cash-on-cash ROI is usually higher than asset ROI on a mortgaged property, sometimes by a wide margin.
A few other key metrics feed into how investors measure real estate ROI. Cap rate compares a property's income after expenses against its current market value, useful for judging a property independent of financing. Gross and net rental yield measure income return against price, before and after expenses respectively. Portfolio ROI rolls all of these calculations up across every property an investor owns, producing one combined figure instead of judging assets one at a time. Unrealized gain captures the part of your return that comes purely from the property becoming more valuable over time, kept separate from rental income.
A common mistake is blending capital appreciation into an income-based ROI figure without separating the two. If a property in Toronto earned CAD 15,000 in rental profit this year and its market value also rose CAD 40,000, combining both into one ROI number looks impressive on paper but does not reflect cash you can actually spend today. The appreciation is real wealth, but it stays on paper until you sell. Careful investors track income ROI and unrealized gain as two separate lines, never one blended figure.
IONROI calculates every version of real estate ROI automatically from the transactions you already record: rent payments, expenses, mortgage payments, down payments, and property valuations. Instead of forcing you to pick one formula and live with it, IONROI shows asset ROI, cash-on-cash ROI, and unrealized gain side by side, for both the current year and the full life of your investment, so you always know exactly which number you're looking at and what it means for your money.
Related terms
Frequently asked questions
- Is real estate ROI calculated the same way as ROI on stocks or other investments?
- Not quite. Stock market ROI is usually simple: the change in share price plus any dividends, divided by what you paid. Real estate ROI is more layered because a property generates ongoing rental income, carries ongoing costs like maintenance and mortgage payments, and can be bought with borrowed money that changes your actual cash exposure. This is why real estate investors track several ROI variants such as cash-on-cash return and cap rate, rather than a single number the way stock investors often do. Financing makes the biggest difference: a small cash down payment on a mortgaged property can produce a much higher percentage return than the same amount invested in stocks, but it also carries more risk if property values or rents fall.
- Which real estate ROI metric should I actually use for my rental property?
- Use cash-on-cash return if you financed the property with a mortgage and want to know the return on the actual cash you put in, since that reflects your real capital at risk. Use asset ROI or cap rate if you are comparing several properties and want a like-for-like view independent of how each is financed. Use portfolio ROI once you own more than one property, since it shows how your properties are performing together rather than one at a time. Most investors end up tracking two or three of these side by side. IONROI shows cash-on-cash ROI, asset ROI, and unrealized gain together on the same dashboard so you're not stuck picking just one.
- Does real estate ROI include the increase in a property's value, or just rental income?
- It depends on which version you're looking at. Income-based ROI measures only cash you actually collected, meaning rent minus expenses and mortgage payments. It does not include the property becoming more valuable. Total return, sometimes quoted by agents and analysts, adds the property's price appreciation on top of income, which can make headline numbers look far more attractive. The appreciation portion stays unrealized until you sell the property, so treating it the same as cash in hand can be misleading when planning your finances. IONROI separates these two clearly, showing income ROI and unrealized gain as two distinct figures rather than combining them into one number.
Track real estate roi automatically
IONROI calculates your key property metrics automatically as you record transactions.
Start free