Free US Cap Rate Calculator:
Commercial Real Estate & Rental Valuation
Calculate capitalization rate, estimate commercial property value from pro forma NOI, or find your required income. Features a step-by-step operating expense builder, 2025-2026 US market benchmarks (multifamily, retail, industrial), 5×5 sensitivity analysis, and downloadable PDF reports.
How Our US Capitalization Rate Calculator Works (NOI & Value)
Select your solve mode at the top. Cap Rate if you know the property value and NOI. Property Value if you know NOI and your target return. Required NOI if you know the asking price and market cap rate.
Step 1 — Mode ToggleType in the property value or target cap rate depending on your chosen mode. Select the property type so the tool can compare your result against the correct 2025–2026 US market benchmark for that asset class.
Step 2 — Property DetailsIf you already know your annual NOI, type it directly. Or use the NOI Builder to calculate it from scratch — enter gross rent, other income, vacancy rate, and each of the 8 operating expense categories line by line.
Step 3 — NOI InputClick Calculate Cap Rate. Your instant results include cap rate grade (A+ to D), investment verdict, 5×5 sensitivity table, 10-property benchmark comparison, income/expense chart, and a downloadable PDF report.
Step 4 — Results & ExportWhat is a Good Cap Rate in US Commercial & Residential Real Estate?
The capitalization rate — universally called the cap rate — is the single most widely used metric in commercial and residential investment real estate. It measures the annual return a property generates from its operations, completely independent of how it was financed. No mortgage payment. No loan amount. Just the raw income-to-value relationship of the property itself.
Calculating Net Operating Income (NOI) for Property Valuation
NOI is the annual income a property generates after all operating expenses are paid, but before mortgage payments, income taxes, and depreciation. It is the number that drives every cap rate calculation — get this wrong and your entire analysis is wrong.
2025-2026 US Market Cap Rate Benchmarks (Multifamily & Retail)
A cap rate by itself is just a number. What makes it meaningful is context — what property type, what market, and what your investment goals are. Here is how professional US real estate investors read cap rate ranges in 2025–2026.
Core Real Estate Metrics: Cap Rate vs. Cash-on-Cash Return & DSCR
CoC measures your annual pre-tax cash flow as a percentage of the actual cash you invested — including your down payment and closing costs. Unlike cap rate, CoC is affected by financing.
CoC = Annual Cash Flow ÷ Cash Invested × 100A quick, back-of-napkin screening metric. GRM = Property Price ÷ Annual Gross Rent. It ignores expenses entirely — use it only for rapid initial screening before running a full cap rate analysis.
GRM = Price ÷ Annual Gross RentDSCR is what your lender cares about most. It compares your NOI to your total annual debt payments. A DSCR above 1.25x means your property generates 25% more income than needed to cover the mortgage.
DSCR = NOI ÷ Annual Debt ServiceA residential market health indicator used by economists. Divide the median home price by annual median rent. A ratio above 20 signals a market favoring renters (low cap rates); below 15 favors buyers.
P/R Ratio = Price ÷ Annual RentThe most comprehensive profitability metric. IRR accounts for all cash flows across the entire hold period — including the eventual sale proceeds. For long-term holds of 5+ years, IRR is a more complete picture than cap rate alone.
Requires multi-year DCF modelThe percentage of Effective Gross Income consumed by operating expenses. A healthy single-family rental has an expense ratio of 35–50%. Above 60% is a warning sign — the property is expensive to operate relative to its income.
Expense Ratio = Total OpEx ÷ EGI × 100| Metric | Includes Financing? | Includes Appreciation? | Best Used For | Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cap Rate | No | No | Comparing properties, market pricing | Ignores leverage and hold-period returns |
| Cash-on-Cash | Yes | No | Measuring leveraged cash flow performance | Ignores equity build-up and sale proceeds |
| GRM | No | No | Quick screening before full analysis | Ignores all expenses — highly inaccurate alone |
| DSCR | Yes | No | Lender qualification, debt coverage check | Lender metric — not a return measure |
| IRR | Optional | Yes | Full lifecycle return analysis (5–10 yr hold) | Requires sale price assumption |
| Total Return | Optional | Yes | Complete wealth creation measurement | Future appreciation is speculative |
How Federal Reserve Interest Rates & Supply Impact Cap Rates
Cap rates are not static — they shift in response to economic conditions, interest rate cycles, and local market supply and demand. Understanding what drives cap rate movement is essential before you buy, sell, or refinance.
When the Federal Reserve raises rates, borrowing costs increase, making real estate less attractive relative to bonds. Buyers demand higher cap rates (lower prices) to compensate. From 2022 to 2024, the Fed’s rate cycle pushed US cap rates up by 100–200 basis points across most asset classes.
When market rents are rising quickly, investors accept lower current cap rates because they expect NOI to grow. Sun Belt multifamily markets in 2020–2022 saw cap rates compress below 4% purely on rent growth expectations — even as values hit record highs.
Heavy new construction in a market increases vacancy, which depresses effective rents and NOI. Buyers re-price the risk into higher required cap rates. As of 2025–2026, high-supply apartment markets like Austin, TX are experiencing cap rate expansion from this dynamic.
Class A properties (new construction, premium amenities) always trade at lower cap rates than Class B or C assets. The market permanently prices in higher management costs, higher vacancy risk, and deferred maintenance risk for older, less desirable properties.
Expert Tips: Common Pitfalls in Pro Forma NOI & CapEx Budgeting
Real US Investment Scenarios: Single-Family Rental to Class A Multifamily
These five example deals show how cap rates actually look in current US markets — from a low-yield Class A apartment in a gateway city to a high-yield, high-risk small-town retail strip. Numbers are rounded but representative of real 2025–2026 transactions.
This is a typical Class A institutional deal. Large sponsors accept a 5.0–5.5% cap rate because of strong job growth, high-income tenants, and long-term appreciation potential in the Denver metro.
This is a bread-and-butter Midwestern SFR deal. A 6.5–7.0% cap rate in a stable B-class suburb offers solid cash flow with manageable vacancy and maintenance risk.
Post‑COVID, neighborhood retail in growth markets often trades in the mid‑7% range. Investors demand a higher cap rate to compensate for shorter lease terms and the possibility of tenant turnover.
Deals above 10% cap usually involve meaningful risk: small‑town demographics, single‑tenant exposure, limited re‑tenanting options, or significant deferred maintenance. Always stress‑test vacancy and re‑lease assumptions.
Many 2025–2026 multifamily investors target this profile: buying B/C‑class assets at ~6.5–7.5% going‑in cap rates, then raising rents and improving operations to reach 8.5–9.5% stabilized cap rates over 18–36 months.
Expert Underwriting Strategies for Commercial Value-Add Deals
These five pro tips reflect how experienced US investors, appraisers, and lenders actually think about cap rates in 2025–2026 — far beyond the basic “NOI ÷ value” formula.
Cap rates are ultimately set by what buyers are actually paying in your market, not by rules of thumb. Before deciding whether a 6.5% cap rate is “good,” pull at least three closed sales of similar properties (same type, class, and submarket) from the past 6–12 months and calculate their implied cap rates using real NOI, not pro forma numbers.
Professional underwriting usually distinguishes between trailing twelve‑month NOI (T‑12) and stabilized NOI after planned renovations, lease‑ups, and rent increases. A value‑add deal often trades on today’s T‑12 cap rate, but investors underwrite to a higher stabilized cap rate 18–36 months out. Your calculator should run both so you can see the true gap between “as is” and “as‑stabilized.”
In a low‑rate environment, investors are willing to accept lower cap rates because cheap debt magnifies returns. When interest rates rise, cap rates almost always drift upward as buyers demand more yield relative to safer assets like Treasuries. In 2022–2024, for example, a 200–300 bps jump in borrowing costs pushed cap rates 100–200 bps higher across many US markets.
A 10–11% cap rate can be amazing — or a trap. The key question is: how reliable is the NOI? Short remaining lease terms, month‑to‑month tenants, high concessions, heavy dependence on one anchor tenant, or aggressive expense under‑budgeting can all make current NOI unsustainable. Professional buyers often haircut stated NOI by 5–20% to reflect realistic long‑term performance.
Cap rate is a powerful snapshot metric, but it is still only one frame of a longer movie. Seasoned investors use cap rate to quickly compare pricing, then layer in DSCR (for lender risk), cash‑on‑cash return (for monthly cash flow), and IRR or equity multiple (for long‑term wealth creation). A slightly lower cap rate with better long‑term rent growth and safer tenants can beat a high‑cap deal over a 10‑year hold.
Capitalization Rate & Property Valuation Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Related US Commercial & Residential Real Estate Calculators
Once you know a property’s cap rate, these calculators help you stress-test cash flow, financing, taxes, and exit strategy — all using US standards and the same design system.
Check whether your NOI comfortably covers the proposed mortgage payment. See how different loan terms and rates affect DSCR — the metric lenders care about most.
Turn your cap rate and NOI into a full monthly cash-flow statement. Model rent, all expenses, and debt service to see real dollars in and out each month.
Go beyond cap rate and estimate your total return over time — combining cash flow, loan paydown, tax benefits, and appreciation into one ROI picture.
Use your cap rate and NOI to plan a full Buy–Rehab–Rent–Refinance–Repeat cycle, including cash-out refinance proceeds and long-term portfolio growth.
Considering selling a low-cap asset to move into a higher-yield deal? Estimate capital gains taxes and how much you can defer by doing a 1031 exchange.
Property taxes are one of the largest operating expenses inside NOI. Estimate annual taxes by state and county, then plug the results into your cap rate model.
Compute buyer and seller closing costs on your acquisition or sale. Use it alongside this cap rate tool to see your true total return on a deal.
See how refinancing to a lower rate changes your monthly payments, DSCR, and overall returns — especially helpful when cap rates and interest rates are moving.
For older owner-occupants holding low-cap, high-equity properties, estimate how much equity could be accessed via a reverse mortgage while still living in the home.
Editorial Transparency & Calculation Methodology
This section explains our calculation methods, data sources, independence, and legal limitations so you can interpret the results with the right level of confidence and caution.
USFinanceCalculators.com is independently operated. Our goal is to present institutional-quality math in plain language for US real estate investors.
For a deeper, data-driven view of how cap rates relate to commercial property prices and expected returns, the Federal Reserve has published research on national cap rate movements and their impact on local markets.
🏢 Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco — “Cap Rates and Commercial Property Prices” federalreserve.gov / frbsf.orgWe recommend reviewing at least one primary-source paper like this before making large commercial real estate decisions. Our calculator is a helpful front-end, not a replacement for professional due diligence or original research.