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Updated 12 months ago on . Most recent reply
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Do you really need IRR or NPV in rental property investing?
I have been looking into IRR and NPV and I am hearing mixed reviews about both of them so I was wondering if you really need either of these two formulas or is one better than the other?
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Hmmm...
To calculate the interest earned by an investment of $25 per month at 5% interest per year where you make a year's worth of payments, you take the first payment and add one month's interest to it ($25 x 5% x 1/12). Next month, add that amount to the second month's payment ($25 x 5% x 1/12 + $50 x 5% x 1/12), and so on. In the end, you'll have some amount of money - your principal payments plus the interest they earned over the course of a year - a total of $306.97.
The NPV is just the opposite. Let's say you're promised a single lump sum equal to that amount ($306.97) in one year's time in an IOU at 5% interest. Now you want to know what that IOU is worth today. A financial calculator would indicate it's worth $292.03. Stated differently, the IOU for $292.03 today is equivalent to the string of 12 monthly payments of $25 if both earn 5% interest for a year. That's its Net Present Value.
The IRR is just a way to run the IOU calculation backward. If you receive 12 monthly payments of $25 and in the end you have $306.97 in your pocket, what interest rate did you earn? That same financial calculator will indicate you killed it, earning 5% on that string of 12 payments.
Different investors swear by different criteria, whether it's IRR (and the closely related NPV), cash on cash, the debt coverage service ratio (DSCR), the CAP rate for a property, or some other metric. Find one you like and run with it, but become familiar with the lingo so you're able to converse with someone else that uses a different favorite flavor of investment criteria when they're evaluating deals.
Hopefully I didn't just muddy the waters - or make your head explode!