Prorated Rent Calculator
Calculate the exact rent due for a partial month based on your move-in date. Supports Actual Days, 30-Day Month, and Banker's proration methods with a full move-in cost breakdown.
How to Use the Prorated Rent Calculator
Calculating prorated rent has three variables: your monthly rent, your move-in date, and the proration method your landlord uses. Enter all three, add any move-in fees, and the calculator does the rest in seconds.
Enter Your Monthly Rent
Type your full monthly rent amount in the first field — the amount shown on your lease agreement, before any prorations or concessions. This is the base figure the calculator divides to find your daily rate. If your landlord has offered a discounted first-month rate as a move-in special, use the standard rent amount (not the discounted figure) here, and note any concessions separately. Your prorated amount is always calculated from the full contractual rent.
Select Your Move-In Date
Use the date picker to select the exact date your tenancy begins — the first day you are responsible for rent, even if you don’t physically move in until later. The calculator counts this day as a billable day. The calendar visual on the results panel will immediately highlight every billed day in blue and show unbilled days in grey, so you can see at a glance exactly what you’re paying for. Moving in on different dates can significantly change your prorated amount — try a few dates to compare.
Choose the Proration Method
Select the method your landlord uses from the dropdown — Actual Days, 30-Day Month, or Banker’s Method. If your lease doesn’t specify a method, ask your landlord before making payment. The Actual Days method is the most common and gives the most accurate result based on the true length of the move-in month. The 30-Day and Banker’s methods use fixed divisors and produce slightly different amounts. The calculator shows which method was used in the snapshot cards and PDF report so there’s no ambiguity.
Add Your Move-In Fees
Fill in any additional amounts due at move-in — security deposit, last month’s rent, pet deposit, and application or administrative fees. These are optional fields; leaving any field at zero simply excludes that item from the total. The calculator adds all components and shows a complete move-in cost breakdown with proportion bars, so you can see exactly what makes up your total first payment. The PDF receipt lists each fee line by line — useful for documenting your payment to your landlord.
Download Your PDF Receipt
Click “Download PDF” to generate a two-page, professionally formatted receipt you can save for your records or share with your landlord. Page 1 shows your prorated rent, snapshot metrics, the proration formula, calculation details, and visual charts. Page 2 provides a full itemized move-in cost table, the exact formula used with your numbers filled in, and a disclaimer. The PDF is suitable for attaching to payment confirmation emails, move-in documentation folders, or sharing with a roommate splitting the costs.
What This Calculator Shows You
Prorated rent is just one number — but understanding the full picture of your first month’s costs requires six distinct outputs. Here’s what each one tells you.
Prorated Rent Due
The exact partial-month rent amount you owe, displayed as the hero figure at the top of the results panel. This is calculated by multiplying your daily rate by the number of days you’ll occupy the unit during the partial month — from your move-in date through the last day of that month, inclusive. This is the only amount you owe for the first partial month; full rent begins on the first of the following month.
Amount Saved vs Full Month
The difference between your full monthly rent and your prorated amount — the money you save by not paying for the days before your move-in date. This figure helps you understand the financial benefit of your specific move-in date and is useful when negotiating dates with a landlord. Moving in later in the month saves more on proration but brings your next full rent payment due sooner — this calculator lets you balance both factors clearly.
Visual Calendar Breakdown
A full monthly calendar rendered in the results panel with every billed day highlighted in blue and every unbilled day shown in grey. The calendar header displays the move-in month and year, with day-of-week labels so you can orient yourself immediately. This visual makes the proration completely transparent — you can count billed days by eye and confirm the calculation matches what you’d expect from reading your lease start date.
Daily Rent Rate
Your monthly rent divided by the method divisor — this is the per-day cost of your unit. Knowing your daily rate is useful beyond the proration calculation: it helps you evaluate last-minute move-out scenarios, negotiate short-term rent concessions, and understand the true cost of extending or shortening your tenancy by a few days. The daily rate varies slightly between methods because each uses a different divisor, which is why the proration method selection matters.
Total Move-In Cost
The complete sum of every dollar due at signing or move-in: prorated rent, security deposit, last month’s rent, pet deposit, and any application or administrative fees. This is the number you need to have ready before your lease start date — either in a cashier’s check, certified funds, or bank transfer, depending on your landlord’s requirements. The move-in cost breakdown bars show each component’s proportion of the total so you can clearly see what you’re paying and why.
Downloadable PDF Receipt
A two-page, print-ready PDF receipt documenting your prorated rent calculation, move-in cost breakdown, and the exact formula used — with your numbers filled in. Useful for your personal records, sharing with a roommate who needs to understand the split, providing documentation to an employer relocation program, or simply having a clean paper trail for a payment your landlord may not otherwise itemize. The receipt includes a reference date and proration method clearly labeled.
Key Facts About Prorated Rent & Move-In Costs
A Real Proration Calculation — Step by Step
Here’s exactly how the calculator works through a sample scenario so you can verify the math for your own lease.
Understanding the Three Proration Methods
The method your landlord uses determines your daily rate — and different methods can produce meaningfully different prorated amounts for the same move-in date. Always verify which method applies to your lease.
The monthly rent is divided by the true number of days in the move-in month — 28, 29 (leap year), 30, or 31 days. This produces the most accurate daily rate because it reflects the real length of the month. The daily rate changes slightly depending on which month you move in: moving in during February gives a slightly higher daily rate (shorter month), while moving in during January or March gives a lower daily rate (longer month). Most professional property managers and large apartment communities use this method.
e.g. $2,400 ÷ 31 = $77.42/day (March)
The monthly rent is always divided by 30 regardless of how many days are in the actual move-in month. This creates a consistent, predictable daily rate that never changes — useful for landlords who want simplicity and tenants who want to calculate their proration without looking up the specific month. This method benefits tenants moving in during shorter months like February (where the true divisor is 28 or 29) and benefits landlords in longer months like January, March, May, July, August, October, and December (where 30 is less than the true count).
e.g. $2,400 ÷ 30 = $80.00/day (any month)
The Banker’s Method divides the monthly rent by 30.4167 — the average number of days in a month when calculated as 365 ÷ 12. This creates a fixed daily rate that represents the annual average cost per day rather than the specific month’s cost. It’s most commonly used in commercial real estate leases and some institutional residential landlords who prefer a single consistent daily rate year-round. The Banker’s rate falls between the Actual Days rate for short months and long months, making it a reasonable middle ground when month-by-month consistency is a priority.
e.g. $2,400 ÷ 30.42 = $78.89/day (any month)
Some leases specify a custom proration method — or none at all. When a lease is silent on proration, local custom and implied fair dealing typically mean the Actual Days method applies by default, but this isn’t guaranteed in every state. If your lease specifies a 30-day method or Banker’s method explicitly, use that selection in this calculator. If your lease specifies any other method — for example, prorating based on the number of weeks in the month — contact your landlord to get the daily rate in writing before using any calculator result as the basis for your payment.
Get the daily rate in writing if no method is stated.
How the Three Methods Compare on the Same Move-In
Using $2,400/month rent and a March 15th move-in date (17 days billed, March has 31 actual days) — here’s how each method produces a different result.
| Feature | Actual Days | 30-Day Month | Banker’s (365/12) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Divisor used | 31 (true March days) | 30 (always fixed) | 30.4167 (365÷12) |
| Daily rent rate | $77.42/day | $80.00/day | $78.89/day |
| Billable days | 17 (Mar 15–31) | 17 (Mar 15–31) | 17 (Mar 15–31) |
| Prorated rent due | $1,316.13 (lowest) | $1,360.00 (highest) | $1,341.13 (middle) |
| Amount saved vs full month | $1,083.87 | $1,040.00 | $1,058.87 |
| Divisor changes by month? | Yes — February is 28/29 days | No — always 30 | No — always 30.4167 |
| Most tenant-favorable month to move in | 31-day months (lower daily rate) | Any month (fixed rate) | Any month (fixed rate) |
| Most common usage | Residential apartments · Most landlords | Smaller landlords · Private rentals | Commercial leases · Institutional landlords |
| Supported in this calculator | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
Which method should I use? Always match the method in your lease agreement. If your lease doesn’t specify one, the Actual Days method is the most widely accepted default and the most accurate. The difference between methods on the same move-in date is typically $20–$80 — small enough that it rarely warrants a dispute, but worth verifying upfront so there are no surprises at lease signing.
How Different People Use This Calculator
Whether you’re moving in, managing a rental, or relocating for work — the numbers you care about are different. Here’s how each group gets the most value from this tool.
Tenants Moving In
Know exactly what you oweYou’re signing a lease that starts mid-month and want to know your exact first payment before handing over a cashier’s check. Or you’re comparing two apartments with different available dates and want to see which move-in date actually costs less once proration is factored in.
- Try different move-in dates to find the one with the best prorated amount
- Add your security deposit and last month’s rent to see your total first-day cost
- Download the PDF and bring it to your lease signing as a reference document
- Ask your landlord to confirm the proration method before calculating
- Compare the three methods to understand your range if the method isn’t specified
Landlords & Property Managers
Clear, professional documentationYou need to calculate prorated rent for a tenant moving in mid-month and provide a clear, documented breakdown of the first month’s charges. Using a transparent, formula-driven calculator reduces tenant disputes and gives you a professional receipt to attach to the move-in documentation.
- Select the method that matches your lease agreement for legally consistent results
- Use the PDF receipt as an attachment to your move-in cost statement
- The formula box on Page 2 of the PDF shows your exact math — no ambiguity
- Itemize all fees using the four additional fee fields for a complete first payment summary
- Share the calculator link with tenants so they can verify the math themselves
Relocating Employees
Relocation cost documentationYour employer is covering relocation costs and needs itemized documentation of your move-in expenses. Or your HR team needs to reimburse your first month’s housing costs and requires a clear breakdown of prorated rent versus other fees to process the payment correctly.
- Download the PDF and attach it to your relocation expense report
- The PDF clearly separates prorated rent from deposits and fees for accounting purposes
- The reference date and proration method are labeled on every page for audit compliance
- The formula box shows exactly how the prorated amount was calculated — no rounding errors
- If your start date is flexible, use the calculator to find the most reimbursement-efficient date
7 Things to Know About Prorated Rent Before You Sign
Prorated rent seems straightforward — but there are details in the calculation, the timing, and the documentation that trip up both tenants and landlords. Here’s what experienced renters know.
Your Move-In Day Is Always Day One — Even If You Don’t Move Furniture
The date your lease begins is the date your financial responsibility starts — regardless of when you physically move your belongings in. If your lease starts on the 15th, you’re billed from the 15th even if you don’t pick up the keys until the 17th. This matters for proration because the billable days count starts from the lease start date, not the physical move-in date. If your landlord gives you a grace period for a key pickup or early access day that isn’t formally on the lease, make sure it’s documented in writing so you aren’t inadvertently charged for additional days.
Moving In Near Month-End Can Save on Proration But Cost You Immediately After
Moving in on the 28th or 29th of the month means you only pay prorated rent for 2–4 days — a significant saving. However, your next full month’s rent comes due just 2–4 days later on the 1st of the following month. If you’re cash-constrained at move-in, this rapid follow-up payment can catch you off guard. Use this calculator to model both the prorated amount and the timeline: the total of your prorated rent plus the first full month is often a more useful planning figure than the prorated amount alone.
Get the Proration Method and Calculation in Writing Before Paying
Verbal agreements about proration are a common source of move-in disputes. Before handing over any payment, ask your landlord to specify in writing the proration method being used, the daily rate calculated, the number of billable days, and the exact prorated amount. If your lease doesn’t already include this breakdown, request an addendum or at minimum an email confirmation. Having documented agreement prevents disputes at move-out (some landlords also prorate the final month) and gives you a clean paper trail if you ever need to reference the calculation.
Understand Which Move-In Fees Are Refundable — and the Conditions
Not all move-in fees are created equal. Security deposits are refundable — subject to deductions for damages, unpaid rent, and lease violations — and most states require landlords to return them within 14–30 days of move-out with an itemized statement of any deductions. Last month’s rent is held and applied to your final month of tenancy, not returned in cash. Pet deposits may be partially refundable; pet fees are almost never refundable. Application fees are universally non-refundable. Knowing which category each fee falls into affects how you budget and what to expect at lease end.
February Is the Most Expensive Month to Move In Under Actual Days
With only 28 or 29 days, February produces the highest daily rate under the Actual Days proration method — your monthly rent divided by the smallest possible divisor. Moving in on February 15th means your daily rate is $2,400 ÷ 28 = $85.71, versus $2,400 ÷ 31 = $77.42 if you moved in on March 15th. The prorated amount for the same number of billable days is noticeably higher in February than in any other month. If you have flexibility, moving in during a 31-day month under the Actual Days method gives you the lowest possible daily rate.
Prorated Rent at Move-Out Works the Same Way — Ask About It
If your lease ends mid-month — either by mutual agreement, lease expiration on a non-month-end date, or early termination — prorated rent applies to your final month exactly as it does for move-in. Many tenants don’t realize they’re entitled to this and simply pay a full final month when moving out on the 15th. When giving your notice to vacate, confirm with your landlord whether your final rent will be prorated, what method they’ll use, and whether the prorated amount will be deducted from your final payment or applied as a credit. Get this confirmation in writing just as you would for move-in proration.
Use the PDF Receipt as Part of Your Lease Signing Package
Most landlords provide a written rent ledger or move-in statement, but not all do — particularly individual landlord-owners managing a single property. If your landlord doesn’t provide a formal breakdown of your first payment, download the PDF from this calculator and bring it to your signing. It documents the prorated rent calculation, move-in fees, and formula used — and provides a clear reference if any discrepancy arises later. Having a signed, dated copy of your move-in cost breakdown in your records is one of the simplest ways to protect yourself against future disputes over what was paid and why.
Prorated Rent Calculator FAQ
Straightforward answers to the questions tenants, landlords, and property managers ask most about prorated rent calculations.
Important disclaimer: All calculations provided by this tool are for educational and estimation purposes only and do not constitute legal, financial, or rental advice. Prorated rent amounts depend on the method specified in your lease agreement — the Actual Days, 30-Day, and Banker’s Method options may produce different results for the same move-in date. Accuracy requires selecting the same method your landlord uses and entering the correct monthly rent from your lease. This calculator does not model free rent concessions, move-in specials, rent abatements, lease addenda, or state-specific regulations governing security deposits, advance rent collection, or prorated rent requirements. Always confirm the prorated rent amount with your landlord or property manager in writing before submitting payment. HomeExpertly is not a landlord, property manager, attorney, or financial advisor.
