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Updated almost 5 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Is this newbie using the rental property calculator wrong?

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Okay, so I've looked at 3 properties right now in the Salt Lake City area. All of them have produced a negative CoC ROI of about -5 to about -9% on the rental property calculator here. Am I doing something wrong? Maybe I'm calculating the gross monthly income all wrong because I'm basically using Rentometer and taking the average rent from that area. I mean Cottonwood Heights is supposed to be a decent area. How common is it to get a negative Coc ROI from the calculator. I'd really appreciate some advice on this.

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@Edward Agadjanian Certain areas do not cash flow. A quick way to see if it will cash flow use the 1% rule. Monthly rent divided by 1%. $1500/.01=$150000 max purchase price. I have to disagree with @Rachel Stewart, your  expenses are low. Vacancy of 5% is your tenant staying an average of 20 months. 5/100=1/20. I use 8% or 1/12. My capex budget includes but not limited too: roof 25 life span, floors 10 year life span, appliances and hot water heater 12 year life span, hvac 20 year life span, bath and kitchen remodel 20 year life span, etc. Assume 1500 sf of flooring, Put it in new when you buy. My area it is $6 sf to replace. 1500 sf*$6=$9000/10 year life span/12 months in a year= $75 per month for 1 item that was brand new. You can't replace anything else in my capex budget. I use 10%. 

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