Monthly Cash Flow: $2,500 Rent vs $1,600 Mortgage
A rental property at $2,500 per month with a $1,600 mortgage and $500 in monthly expenses yields approximately $280 per month in cash flow.
How to use this tool
- Enter the gross monthly rent at full occupancy.
- Set a realistic vacancy and credit-loss percentage.
- Add any other monthly income (parking, laundry, fees).
- Enter monthly operating expenses, including reserves, EXCLUDING the mortgage.
- Enter the monthly mortgage payment (principal + interest) and read the cash flow.
Calculate net monthly cash flow on a $2,500 per month rental property with a $1,600 monthly mortgage and $500 in operating expenses.
Frequently asked questions
- What counts as good cash flow?
- Many investors look for at least $100-$200 of positive monthly cash flow per unit after all expenses and reserves, though targets vary widely by market and strategy. The key is that the number is positive after honest, fully-loaded expenses.
- Should I include property management and reserves?
- Yes. Even if you self-manage today, budget for management and for capital reserves so the analysis survives a vacancy, a turnover, or a major repair. Omitting them is the top cause of surprise negative cash flow.
- Is cash flow the same as profit?
- Not exactly. Cash flow is the actual money in and out. Accounting profit also reflects depreciation and other non-cash items. For a buy-and-hold investor, monthly cash flow is usually the more practical figure.