Fix and Flip ROI: $250K ARV, $150K Purchase, $30K Rehab
A fix-and-flip with $250,000 ARV, $150,000 purchase price, and $30,000 rehab costs yields approximately $45,000 in net profit before taxes.
How to use this tool
- Enter the after-repair value: the expected sale price after renovation.
- Enter the purchase price and renovation budget.
- Estimate holding costs (interest, taxes, insurance, utilities while you own it).
- Estimate selling costs (commissions and closing costs at sale).
- Read the net profit, total cost, and ROI.
Calculate the net profit and ROI for a fix-and-flip project with a $250,000 after-repair value, $150,000 purchase price, and $30,000 in renovation costs.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a good ROI on a house flip?
- Many flippers target a net profit of at least 10-20% of the all-in cost, or a fixed minimum profit such as $25,000-$50,000 per deal, to compensate for the time, risk, and capital. The right target depends on your market and capital cost.
- Why include holding and selling costs?
- They are real and large. Holding costs accrue every month you own the property, and selling costs (commissions plus closing) often run 6-10% of the sale price. Leaving them out overstates profit dramatically.
- Is this ROI annualized?
- No. It is the simple return on total cost for the whole project. A 20% return earned in six months is far better than the same 20% over two years, so also track your timeline.