Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Cash-on-Cash Return (also known as 'Cash Yield') ====== Cash-on-Cash Return is a simple yet powerful metric, most commonly used in [[real estate]] investing, that measures the annual cash income you receive against the actual cash you invested. Think of it as a "back-of-the-napkin" calculation that answers a crucial question: "For every dollar I put into this deal, how many cents am I getting back in my pocket this year?" It’s expressed as a percentage and focuses purely on the cash flow performance of an investment. Unlike more complex metrics like [[Return on Investment (ROI)]], it ignores non-cash factors like potential profit from a future sale (appreciation), tax benefits, or the portion of your mortgage payment that builds equity. Its beauty lies in its simplicity, providing a quick snapshot of an asset's ability to generate cold, hard cash. ===== Why It Matters to a Value Investor ===== For a value investor, cash flow is king. The Cash-on-Cash Return metric gets right to the heart of what makes an investment productive. * **Focus on Immediate Yield:** It cuts through accounting complexities and market speculation to show you exactly how hard your invested capital is working for you //right now//. A strong Cash-on-Cash return means the investment is paying you to own it, which is a core principle for many value-oriented investors who seek assets that generate income while they wait for long-term value to be realized. * **A Powerful Filtering Tool:** When you’re sifting through dozens of potential properties, you need a quick way to separate the wheat from the chaff. Calculating the Cash-on-Cash return allows you to rapidly compare different opportunities on an apples-to-apples basis and discard those that don't meet your minimum cash flow requirements. * **Highlights the Magic of Leverage:** This metric brilliantly illustrates the power of using [[leverage]] (i.e., borrowed money). Because the calculation is based on the cash //you// put in—not the total purchase price—you can see how a small down payment can generate an outsized return on your personal capital, even if the overall return on the asset's total value is modest. ===== How to Calculate It: A Step-by-Step Guide ===== The formula itself is straightforward: **Cash-on-Cash Return = (Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow / Total Cash Invested) x 100%**. The trick is getting the two inputs right. ==== Step 1: Find the Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow ==== This is the money left over after you've collected all the rent and paid all the bills, //including// the mortgage. * Start with your property's Gross Scheduled Income (the total potential annual rent). * Subtract losses from vacancy and non-paying tenants to get the Effective Gross Income. * Subtract all annual operating expenses (e.g., property taxes, insurance, maintenance, property management fees) to arrive at the [[Net Operating Income (NOI)]]. * Finally, from the NOI, subtract your annual [[debt service]] (the total of your mortgage principal and interest payments for the year). The result is your **Annual [[Pre-tax Cash Flow]]**. ==== Step 2: Determine the Total Cash Invested ==== This is every dollar you had to take out of your pocket to acquire the asset. It's much more than just the down payment. * **Total Cash Invested** = Down Payment + Closing Costs (e.g., legal fees, appraisal fees, title insurance) + Initial Repair/Renovation Costs (any money spent to make the property rent-ready). ==== Step 3: Do the Math ==== Simply divide your Annual Pre-tax Cash Flow by your Total Cash Invested. For example, if your annual cash flow is $5,000 and your total cash invested was $50,000, your Cash-on-Cash Return is $5,000 / $50,000 = 0.10, or 10%. ===== A Practical Example ===== Let's say you're buying a small apartment building for $1,000,000. * **Your Investment (Total Cash Invested):** - You put 25% down: $250,000 - Closing costs & initial renovations: $30,000 - **Total Cash Invested = $280,000** * **The Cash Flow (Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow):** - The building’s Net Operating Income (NOI) is $65,000 per year. - Your annual mortgage payments on the $750,000 loan are $42,000. - **Annual Pre-tax Cash Flow = $65,000 (NOI) - $42,000 (Debt Service) = $23,000** * **The Calculation:** - Cash-on-Cash Return = $23,000 / $280,000 = 0.082 - **Your Cash-on-Cash Return is 8.2%** This means for the $280,000 you took out of your bank account, you can expect to get $23,000 (or 8.2%) back in cash during the first year. ===== Limitations: What Cash-on-Cash Return Doesn't Tell You ===== While incredibly useful, Cash-on-Cash Return is a snapshot, not the full movie. It has significant blind spots and should never be the only metric you use to evaluate a deal. * **It’s Pre-Tax:** It ignores the impact of taxes. Significant tax benefits, such as mortgage interest deductions and [[depreciation]], can make your //after-tax// return much higher. Conversely, a high tax bill could lower it. * **It Ignores Appreciation:** The metric completely disregards [[capital appreciation]], which is the increase in the property's value over time. For many investors, appreciation is the single largest driver of wealth creation. * **It Misses Equity Buildup:** Part of every mortgage payment reduces your loan principal, thereby increasing your [[equity]] in the property. This is a form of forced savings and wealth building that is invisible to the Cash-on-Cash calculation. * **It Lacks a Time Dimension:** It treats all cash flows as equal, regardless of when they are received. More sophisticated metrics like the [[Internal Rate of Return (IRR)]] account for the time value of money, providing a more comprehensive view of an investment's long-term profitability. ===== The Bottom Line ===== Cash-on-Cash Return is an essential, first-look metric for any serious real estate investor. It's your go-to tool for quickly assessing the income-generating potential of a property and the efficiency of your invested cash. Use it to filter opportunities and to understand the immediate impact of your financing structure. However, always remember its limitations. A great investment decision requires a deeper dive into the total return profile, including tax implications, appreciation potential, and equity growth.