Eviction or Cash for Keys? Find Out Which Option Saves You More
Determine whether it's cheaper to pursue a legal eviction or pay your tenant to leave. Compare total costs including legal fees, lost rent, and repairs across both scenarios.
| Cash Offer | Offer as % of Eviction Cost | Total Buyout Cost | Savings vs Eviction | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculate to see analysis | ||||
Calculate to see analysis
How to Use the Eviction vs. Cash for Keys Calculator
Getting a clear cost comparison takes about two minutes. Enter the real numbers for your situation — the calculator shows you exactly which option costs less, how large an offer you can safely make, and a full sensitivity table showing savings at every offer level.
Enter Scenario A: Legal Eviction
Input your monthly rent (used to calculate vacancy loss), total estimated legal and court fees, the number of months the eviction process is likely to take in your state, and estimated repair and cleanout costs. Also add the weeks you expect to need to re-rent the unit after the tenant leaves — this additional vacancy is often overlooked but adds significantly to total eviction cost.
Enter Scenario B: Cash for Keys
Enter the cash offer amount you’re considering, the number of weeks until the tenant would vacate under the agreement, the cost of minor repairs after a voluntary move-out, and re-rent time. Voluntary departures typically result in better unit condition and a more predictable timeline — both of which significantly affect the true cost difference between the two options.
Review the Side-by-Side Results
The results panel shows both scenarios with full cost itemization — lost rent, legal fees, repairs, and re-rent loss — displayed in color-coded cards. The hero box shows how much cash for keys saves you (green) or how much cheaper eviction is (red). The six summary cards highlight total costs, time saved, lost rent difference, and the maximum viable offer you can make before the economics flip.
Use the Sensitivity Table & PDF
Open the offer sensitivity accordion to see savings at every $500 increment from $0 to 4× monthly rent — color-coded green (cash for keys wins) or red (eviction is cheaper). The break-even point is your negotiating ceiling. Download the two-page PDF to share with your property manager, attorney, or business partner before making an offer to the tenant.
What This Calculator Shows You
Most landlords guess at the economics of cash for keys versus eviction. This calculator replaces guesswork with a complete, itemized financial comparison — including the break-even offer amount that most landlords never calculate.
Savings Hero — Instant Verdict
The results panel leads with a single clear number: how much cash for keys saves you versus eviction, or how much eviction is cheaper if that’s the case. Color-coded green (cash for keys wins) or red (eviction is cheaper), it gives you an instant data-driven verdict before you dig into the details below.
Side-by-Side Scenario Cards
Two color-coded scenario cards — Scenario A in red (eviction) and Scenario B in blue (cash for keys) — each show the total cost prominently, with proportional breakdown bars and itemized line items: lost rent during the process, legal fees or cash offer, repair costs, and re-rent vacancy loss. This gives you full visibility into where each scenario’s money goes.
Maximum Viable Offer Calculation
The calculator computes your break-even offer — the exact cash amount at which the total buyout cost equals the total eviction cost. Any offer below this amount saves money versus eviction; any offer above it makes eviction the cheaper choice. This is the most important number for negotiations and is displayed prominently in the summary cards and PDF.
Offer Sensitivity Accordion Table
A sensitivity table models every $500 increment from $0 to 4× monthly rent, showing total buyout cost, savings versus eviction, and a color-coded recommendation at each level. Your current offer is highlighted in blue. This table makes it immediately visible exactly where the break-even point falls and how much negotiating room you have — essential information before sitting down with a tenant.
Two Charts: Cost Comparison & Eviction Breakdown
A bar chart compares total eviction cost (red) versus total buyout cost (blue) side by side — the simplest possible visual for decision-making. A doughnut chart breaks down the eviction cost by component: lost rent, legal fees, repairs, and re-rent vacancy. Seeing the proportion of each cost category often reveals which inputs have the most leverage for negotiation.
2-Page PDF Report
Download a professional two-page PDF to share with your property manager, attorney, or business partner. Page 1 covers the side-by-side cost comparison, 6 key decision metrics, and both charts. Page 2 contains the full offer sensitivity table, break-even analysis, and disclaimer — everything you need to make and document a data-driven decision.
How Different Landlords Use This Calculator
The right decision between eviction and cash for keys depends heavily on your state, the tenant’s situation, your property’s condition, and how much you can absorb in carrying costs. Here’s how three common landlord profiles approach this analysis.
The Individual Landlord
Non-payment or lease violation — one propertyYou have one tenant who hasn’t paid rent for two or three months and isn’t responding. You want to get the unit back as quickly and cheaply as possible — but you’re not sure whether filing for eviction or offering cash to leave will cost less in the end.
- Enter your state’s realistic eviction timeline — not the minimum possible, but the average contested timeline — to get an accurate lost-rent estimate
- Include the full cost of repairs: evicted units frequently suffer damage significantly beyond normal wear and tear, often $3,000–$10,000+
- Look at the maximum viable offer in the summary cards — this is the ceiling for your negotiation; start 30–40% below it and negotiate up
- Factor in re-rent time for both scenarios: the weeks you need to find a new tenant are vacancy loss regardless of how the current tenant leaves
The Property Manager
Managing the process on behalf of an ownerYou manage multiple properties and deal with problem tenants regularly. You need a fast, defensible cost analysis to present to your property owner before recommending an approach — and a PDF report they can review alongside your recommendation.
- Run this calculator with the owner’s actual numbers and download the PDF — it gives you a professional, documented basis for your recommendation
- Enter realistic legal costs for your market: in some cities, eviction attorneys charge $2,500+ just to file and handle the initial hearing, before any contested proceedings
- Use the sensitivity table to show the owner a range of offer scenarios — it demonstrates you’ve done the analysis, not just guessed at a number
- The break-even offer displayed in the summary is the key talking point: “We can offer up to $X before eviction becomes the cheaper option” is a clear, data-driven recommendation
The Portfolio Investor
Evaluating problem unit costs across multiple propertiesYou own multiple rental units and want to apply a consistent, data-driven framework for handling problem tenants — rather than making ad-hoc decisions that vary by property manager or gut feel. You also need to model the financial impact for investor reporting.
- Use this calculator to establish a standard policy: “We pursue cash for keys whenever the offer is below the break-even point and the tenant shows willingness to negotiate”
- Run scenarios for different rent levels across your portfolio — the break-even offer scales with monthly rent, so higher-rent units have more negotiating room
- Model the full eviction cost including re-rent time: for portfolio reporting, vacancy loss is an occupancy metric, not just a legal cost
- Download PDFs for each unit to create a documented paper trail of the financial analysis behind each decision — useful for investor transparency and potential legal defensibility
7 Things to Know Before Pursuing Eviction or Cash for Keys
Both eviction and cash for keys have legal and financial nuances that significantly affect the outcome. These seven factors are the most commonly misunderstood — and the most costly to get wrong.
Know Your State’s Eviction Timeline Before You Decide
The eviction timeline is the single biggest variable in the cost comparison. A two-month eviction versus a seven-month eviction produces a cost difference of five months of lost rent — potentially $10,000–$25,000 on a $2,000–$5,000/month unit. Research your specific county court’s eviction timeline, not just the state average. Urban courts in tenant-protective states often run 6–12 months even for straightforward non-payment cases. This timeline directly determines how attractive a cash for keys offer should be.
Never Pay Cash for Keys Before the Tenant Has Moved Out
The most common cash for keys mistake is paying the tenant any portion of the agreed amount before they have physically vacated and surrendered all keys. Payment should occur at the moment of key handover — not before, not after, not in installments. A tenant who receives any payment early has very little incentive to complete the move-out on schedule, and you have limited legal recourse if they remain after accepting partial payment. Use a cashier’s check or wire transfer at the key handover to make the exchange simultaneous and documentable.
Get a Written, Attorney-Reviewed Agreement — Every Time
A verbal cash for keys agreement has no legal force. The written agreement must include the vacate date and time, acceptable unit condition, payment amount and method, surrender of all keys and access devices, a mutual release of all claims (including any disputed back rent or security deposit), and signatures from every adult tenant on the lease. Oral agreements and handshake deals routinely result in tenants accepting payment and then refusing to leave, or leaving and then returning with claims. The attorney cost for reviewing a simple cash for keys agreement is typically $150–$400 — far less than the legal cost of a botched transaction.
Budget Accurately for Post-Eviction Repairs — They Are Almost Always Higher
Landlords consistently underestimate repair costs following a contested eviction. Tenants who are forced out through the court system frequently cause significant damage — intentionally or through neglect — during the eviction period when they know they are leaving. Holes in walls, damaged appliances, left-behind junk requiring professional removal, and damaged flooring are all common. Budget $3,000 as a floor for a studio or one-bedroom and $5,000–$15,000+ for larger units. Voluntary move-outs under a cash for keys agreement typically result in significantly better unit condition.
Start Lower Than Your Maximum and Negotiate Up
The maximum viable offer this calculator computes is your ceiling — not your starting point. Make your initial offer 30–50% below the maximum viable amount, framed as a genuine attempt to help the tenant relocate quickly. Many tenants accept the first offer if it’s presented clearly and fairly, especially if they understand that the alternative is a formal eviction that will appear on their rental history. If the tenant counters, you have negotiating room up to your break-even point. Never disclose your maximum — it immediately becomes the floor of the tenant’s negotiation.
Don’t Attempt Cash for Keys If You’ve Already Filed for Eviction
Once an eviction filing is on record, cash for keys negotiations become significantly more complicated. The tenant may have already hired an attorney, the landlord’s negotiating leverage may have shifted, and any payment to the tenant could be interpreted as waiving the eviction filing — potentially requiring you to restart the legal process from scratch. If you want to pursue cash for keys, do so before filing. If you’ve already filed, consult your eviction attorney before approaching the tenant with any offer or payment.
Include Re-Rent Time in Both Scenarios — It’s Often the Biggest Variable
Most landlords calculate eviction cost as legal fees plus lost rent during the eviction process — and stop there. But the unit doesn’t generate income until it’s repaired, listed, screened, leased, and occupied. The additional 4–8 weeks of re-rent time after the tenant leaves (whether by eviction or voluntary departure) is additional vacancy loss in both scenarios. This calculator includes a re-rent time field for both scenarios specifically because it’s the cost component most frequently omitted from informal calculations, and because it can add $2,000–$10,000+ to total cost in high-rent markets.
Eviction vs. Cash for Keys — FAQ
Real questions from landlords and property managers navigating problem tenant situations — answered plainly.
Important disclaimer: All calculations provided by this tool are for educational and financial estimation purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. Eviction timelines, costs, and procedures vary significantly by state, county, and individual circumstances. Repair cost estimates are illustrative only — actual costs depend on property size, tenant behavior, and local contractor rates. Cash for Keys agreements should always be reviewed by a licensed landlord-tenant attorney before being presented to or signed by any tenant. This calculator does not account for jurisdiction-specific tenant protections, rent control ordinances, relocation assistance requirements, or other local regulations that may affect your legal obligations. HomeExpertly is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Always consult a qualified attorney before taking any action to remove a tenant from a rental property.
