IRR Calculator — Real Estate Investment (USA)
Evaluate the true annualized profitability of any real estate investment. Calculate IRR, Equity Multiple, and Total Profit from your cash flows and exit strategy.
How to Calculate IRR in 4 Simple Steps
No spreadsheet experience needed. Enter your deal numbers, hit Calculate, and get a full institutional-grade return analysis — including a downloadable PDF report — in under a minute.
Enter Your Initial Investment
Input the total cash you’re deploying upfront — down payment, closing costs, inspection fees, and any immediate rehab or repairs. This is your Year 0 out-of-pocket cost, not the full purchase price if you’re using financing.
Add Annual Cash Flow & Hold Period
Enter the net annual cash flow from the property — rental income minus all operating expenses and mortgage payments. Set how many years you plan to hold before selling. Adjust the holding period to instantly compare a 5-year vs. 10-year exit.
Set Your Exit Strategy
Enter the expected sale price at the end of your hold period, and the selling cost percentage — agent commissions, title fees, and escrow. Typical U.S. selling costs run 5–8%. The calculator deducts these automatically to show your net sale proceeds.
Review Your Full Return Profile
Instantly see your IRR, Equity Multiple, Average Annual Return, and Total Net Profit alongside a year-by-year cash flow chart and invested vs. returned doughnut chart. Download the PDF to share with partners, lenders, or your own records.
Everything the Calculator Outputs
This isn’t a simple ROI calculator. Every metric mirrors what institutional investors use to evaluate and compare real estate deals — from single-family rentals to small multifamily acquisitions.
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
The core output: the annualized rate that makes the net present value of all cash flows equal zero. Accounts for the timing of every dollar in and out of the deal — displayed green when positive, red when negative.
Equity Multiple
Total cash returned divided by cash invested. A 2.0x equity multiple means you doubled your money over the hold period — regardless of how long that took. Always evaluate this alongside IRR for a complete return picture.
Average Annual Return
A simple (non-compounded) measure of your annual profit as a percentage of invested capital — useful for quick benchmarking against target returns and comparing investment alternatives.
Net Sale Proceeds
Your expected exit value after deducting agent commissions and closing costs. Isolating this figure reveals how much of your total return comes from appreciation versus ongoing cash flow — critical for evaluating the risk/reward balance.
Investment Summary & Return Composition
Six metric cards lay out the complete picture side by side — Total Cash Invested, Total Cash Returned, Net Sale Proceeds, Total Annual Cash Flows, Equity Multiple, and Average Annual Return. Return composition bars above them show what share of your total return came from ongoing cash flows versus the net sale, revealing at a glance whether your deal is income-driven or appreciation-driven.
Visual Charts & PDF Report
Two instant charts update with every calculation: a year-by-year bar chart showing the Year 0 cash outflow (red), interim annual cash flows (blue), and the exit year combined inflow (green); plus a doughnut chart comparing your total cash invested against net profit. Download the complete results as a branded one-page PDF — ready to share with partners, lenders, or attach to your own investment records.
The Numbers Behind Successful Real Estate Returns
Built for Every Stage of Real Estate Investing
Whether you’re analyzing your very first rental or stress-testing a BRRRR refinance, IRR gives you the clearest picture of whether a deal truly makes sense for your capital.
You’ve found a single-family rental and you’re trying to decide if the numbers make sense. You know what cash-on-cash return is, but you want to understand the full picture — including what you’ll make when you sell in 7 years.
- Start with your actual out-of-pocket cash as the initial investment, not the purchase price
- Use your net cash flow after the mortgage payment, not gross rent
- Run multiple scenarios: conservative, base case, and optimistic sale price
- Compare your IRR to a stock market benchmark to validate the risk premium
You buy, rehab, rent, refinance, and repeat. After the refinance pulls most of your cash back out, you want to measure the IRR on the small remaining equity position — and know when to hold versus when to sell.
- Use only the equity left in the deal after cash-out refinance as your investment
- Factor in the post-refinance net cash flow after the new mortgage payment
- Model the exit at a conservative cap rate to stress-test your sale price assumption
- A low remaining equity often produces a very high IRR — verify the inputs are correct
You’re underwriting deals for a GP/LP structure or fund and need a quick IRR sanity check before running your full model. This tool validates preliminary assumptions in 60 seconds before committing to deeper analysis.
- Use sponsor-level IRR: equity deployed net of preferred return waterfall
- Cross-check against your full Excel model — results should be within 0.5%
- Download the PDF to attach to preliminary deal memos for LP review
- Run holding period sensitivity (5 vs 7 vs 10 years) to identify the optimal exit window
7 Things Every Investor Should Know About IRR
IRR is powerful — but it’s also one of the most commonly misused metrics in real estate. These tips will help you interpret results correctly and avoid the most common mistakes.
IRR Is About Timing, Not Just Amount
Two deals returning the same total dollars can have very different IRRs. A deal that returns capital faster has a higher IRR. This is why a 3-year flip often shows a higher IRR than a 10-year buy-and-hold, even if the buy-and-hold generates more total profit.
Always Compare IRR to Your Hurdle Rate
Your hurdle rate is the minimum return you require to justify the risk — your cost of capital plus a risk premium. If a deal’s IRR doesn’t exceed your hurdle rate, it’s destroying value. Most residential value-add investors set hurdle rates of 12–18%.
Pair IRR with Equity Multiple
A high IRR over a short period can produce a disappointing equity multiple. A 40% IRR on a 1-year flip might only yield a 1.3x multiple, while a 14% IRR over 8 years produces a 2.9x multiple. Always evaluate both — IRR tells you speed; equity multiple tells you magnitude.
Use Conservative Exit Assumptions
The sale price dominates your IRR calculation — especially on longer holds. A 10% optimistic bump in exit price can swing your IRR by 3–5 percentage points. Always underwrite your base case at conservative appreciation (1–2% per year above inflation) and run a downside scenario.
Leverage Amplifies IRR — Both Ways
Using a mortgage magnifies returns when the deal performs well (levered IRR > unlevered IRR), but it also magnifies losses if the property underperforms. Always run an unlevered IRR alongside your levered figure to understand how much of your return depends on financing.
Be Careful with Negative Cash Flows
If your annual cash flow is negative (operating at a loss after the mortgage), IRR can still be positive if appreciation is strong enough. However, negative interim cash flows also create a reinvestment assumption issue — confirm those losses are truly serviceable before relying on the IRR figure.
Stress-Test the Hold Period
Run the same deal at 5, 7, and 10 year hold periods. IRR is highly sensitive to when you exit. Some deals look best at a 5-year exit because cash flows are strong early; others benefit from longer holds as appreciation compounds. The optimal exit window often isn’t obvious without running multiple scenarios.
IRR Calculator — Frequently Asked Questions
New to IRR, or want to make sure you’re entering your numbers correctly? These answers cover everything from the math behind the metric to how to handle leveraged deals and negative cash flows.
For informational purposes only. All calculations provided by this tool are for educational and estimation purposes only and do not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. IRR and related metrics are projections based on your inputs and assume equal annual cash flows with no variance — actual investment returns will differ based on market conditions, vacancies, unexpected capital expenditures, financing terms, and other factors. Past real estate performance does not guarantee future results. Always consult a licensed financial advisor or real estate investment professional before making any investment decisions. HomeExpertly is not a lender, broker, or registered investment advisor.
