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Rental Yield Calculator Guide: How to Evaluate Investment Property Returns in Canada

Updated

Evaluating an investment property in Canada requires more than just comparing the asking price to the monthly rent. You need to understand gross yield, net yield, cap rate, cash-on-cash return, and how operating expenses eat into your returns.

This guide breaks down every calculation you need, with real numbers for Canadian markets.

The four essential return metrics

MetricFormulaWhat It MeasuresUse Case
Gross rental yieldAnnual rent ÷ Purchase price × 100Top-line return before expensesQuick screening of properties
Net rental yield(Annual rent − Operating expenses) ÷ Purchase price × 100Return after expenses, before financingComparing properties at different price points
Cap rateNet operating income ÷ Property value × 100Property return independent of financingComparing across markets; valuation
Cash-on-cash returnAnnual pre-tax cash flow ÷ Total cash invested × 100Return on your actual invested capitalMeasuring your personal ROI with leverage

Gross rental yield calculation

Formula

Gross rental yield = (Monthly rent × 12) ÷ Purchase price × 100

Quick reference: gross yield by rent and price

Purchase Price$1,500/mo rent$2,000/mo rent$2,500/mo rent$3,000/mo rent$3,500/mo rent
$300,0006.0%8.0%10.0%12.0%14.0%
$400,0004.5%6.0%7.5%9.0%10.5%
$500,0003.6%4.8%6.0%7.2%8.4%
$600,0003.0%4.0%5.0%6.0%7.0%
$700,0002.6%3.4%4.3%5.1%6.0%
$800,0002.3%3.0%3.8%4.5%5.3%

Rule of thumb: To achieve a 6% gross yield, monthly rent must be 0.5% of the purchase price ($3,000/month on a $600,000 property). The “1% rule” (rent = 1% of price) produces a 12% gross yield — achievable in some smaller markets but rarely in major cities.

Net rental yield and operating expenses

Common operating expenses for Canadian rental properties

Expense CategoryTypical Range (% of gross rent)Annual (on $2,000/mo rent)
Property tax10–20%$2,400–$4,800
Insurance (landlord policy)3–5%$720–$1,200
Maintenance and repairs5–10%$1,200–$2,400
Property management (if hired)8–10%$1,920–$2,400
Vacancy allowance3–5%$720–$1,200
Condo fees (if applicable)15–25%$3,600–$6,000
Utilities (if landlord-paid)5–10%$1,200–$2,400
Accounting and legal1–2%$240–$480
Total operating expenses35–65%$8,400–$15,600

Net yield calculation example

Line ItemAnnual Amount
Gross rental income ($2,500/mo)$30,000
Less: Property tax−$4,000
Less: Insurance−$1,000
Less: Maintenance (5%)−$1,500
Less: Vacancy allowance (4%)−$1,200
Less: Property management (8%)−$2,400
Less: Miscellaneous−$500
Net operating income (NOI)$19,400
Purchase price$500,000
Net rental yield3.88%

Notice the gross yield was 6.0% ($30,000 ÷ $500,000), but the net yield is only 3.88% — operating expenses consumed about 35% of gross rent.

Cap rate deep dive

Why cap rate matters

Cap rate ignores financing — it measures the property’s performance on its own merits. This lets you:

  • Compare properties purchased with different down payments
  • Compare markets with different price levels
  • Estimate property value based on income (Value = NOI ÷ Cap rate)

Cap rate benchmarks by Canadian market (2024–2025)

MarketTypical Cap Rate (Residential)Typical Rent (1BR)Median Price (Condo)Notes
Winnipeg5.5–7.0%$1,200–$1,500$200,000–$280,000Highest yields, slower appreciation
Edmonton5.0–6.5%$1,300–$1,600$220,000–$300,000Strong rental demand, affordable purchase prices
Halifax4.5–6.0%$1,500–$1,800$300,000–$400,000Growing market, university demand
Calgary4.5–5.5%$1,600–$1,900$300,000–$380,000Oil economy sensitivity; strong recent growth
Ottawa3.5–4.5%$1,700–$2,100$400,000–$500,000Government employment base, stable demand
Montreal3.5–4.5%$1,500–$1,800$350,000–$450,000Rent control considerations
Toronto (condo)2.5–3.5%$2,200–$2,800$550,000–$750,000Low yield, high appreciation (historically)
Vancouver (condo)2.0–3.0%$2,300–$2,900$650,000–$850,000Lowest yields in Canada, relies on appreciation

Using cap rate to estimate value

If you know comparable cap rates and the property’s NOI:

Estimated value = NOI ÷ Cap rate

NOICap Rate 4%Cap Rate 5%Cap Rate 6%Cap Rate 7%
$15,000$375,000$300,000$250,000$214,286
$20,000$500,000$400,000$333,333$285,714
$25,000$625,000$500,000$416,667$357,143
$30,000$750,000$600,000$500,000$428,571

Cash-on-cash return: measuring your actual ROI

Formula

Cash-on-cash return = Annual pre-tax cash flow ÷ Total cash invested × 100

Full example: $500,000 property with 20% down

ItemAmount
Cash Invested
Down payment (20%)$100,000
Closing costs (land transfer tax, legal, etc.)$12,000
Immediate repairs/updates$5,000
Total cash invested$117,000
Annual Income
Gross rent ($2,500/mo)$30,000
Less: Vacancy (4%)−$1,200
Effective gross income$28,800
Annual Expenses
Property tax−$4,000
Insurance−$1,000
Maintenance−$1,500
Property management (8%)−$2,400
Miscellaneous−$500
Total operating expenses−$9,400
Net Operating Income (NOI)$19,400
Mortgage Payments
Annual mortgage ($400,000 at 4.5%, 25yr)−$26,640 ($2,220/mo)
Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow−$7,240
Cash-on-Cash Return−6.2%

This property has negative cash flow of $7,240/year — you’d need to contribute $603/month from other income. The cash-on-cash return is negative.

Why investors still buy negative cash flow properties

FactorValue
Annual cash out of pocket−$7,240
Mortgage principal paid (year 1)+$7,500
Appreciation at 3%+$15,000
Total return (including equity)+$15,260
Total return on cash invested+13.0%

When you include equity building and appreciation, the actual return on investment is strong — but you need the cash flow to sustain the carrying costs.

The gross rent multiplier (GRM)

Formula

GRM = Property price ÷ Annual gross rent

A lower GRM means higher yield. GRM is the fastest screening tool for comparing properties.

GRM benchmarks

GRM RangeWhat It MeansTypical Markets
8–10Excellent yield potentialWinnipeg, some Edmonton areas
10–13Good yieldCalgary, Halifax, smaller Ontario cities
13–16Average yieldOttawa, Montreal
16–20Below-average yieldToronto outskirts, suburban GTA
20–25+Yield-dependent on appreciationDowntown Toronto, Vancouver

GRM quick calculation table

Purchase PriceAnnual Rent $18,000Annual Rent $24,000Annual Rent $30,000Annual Rent $36,000
$300,00016.712.510.08.3
$400,00022.216.713.311.1
$500,00027.820.816.713.9
$600,00033.325.020.016.7

Building a rental property evaluation worksheet

Step-by-step process

Step 1: Calculate gross yield and GRM (quick screen)

MetricFormulaYour Numbers
Annual gross rentMonthly rent × 12_____
Gross yieldAnnual rent ÷ Price × 100_____ %
GRMPrice ÷ Annual rent_____
Pass quick screen?Yield >5% or GRM <16Yes / No

Step 2: Estimate operating expenses

ExpenseMonthlyAnnual
Property tax__________
Insurance__________
Maintenance (5–10% of rent)__________
Property management (8–10%)__________
Vacancy allowance (4–8%)__________
Condo fees (if applicable)__________
Utilities (if landlord-paid)__________
Other__________
Total operating expenses__________

Step 3: Calculate NOI and cap rate

MetricCalculation
Net operating incomeAnnual rent − Total operating expenses = _____
Cap rateNOI ÷ Purchase price × 100 = _____ %

Step 4: Add financing and calculate cash-on-cash return

MetricCalculation
Annual mortgage payments_____
Pre-tax cash flowNOI − Mortgage payments = _____
Total cash investedDown payment + closing costs + repairs = _____
Cash-on-cash returnCash flow ÷ Cash invested × 100 = _____ %

Comparing rental properties to other investments

InvestmentTypical Annual ReturnLiquidityEffortLeverage AvailableTax Advantages
Canadian rental property8–12% (total)LowHighYes (5:1 typical)CCA depreciation, expense deductions
GIC (5-year)3.5–4.5%LowNoneNoInterest taxed as income
Canadian equity ETF (XIU)7–10% (historical)HighLowLimited (margin)Capital gains + dividends
REIT ETF (ZRE)6–9% (historical)HighNoneNoDistributions (mixed tax treatment)
Private mortgage lending8–12%Very LowMediumNoInterest taxed as income

Key insight: Rental property total returns (income + appreciation + principal paydown + tax benefits) can match or exceed equity markets — but require significantly more effort, capital, and risk tolerance. Leverage amplifies both gains and losses.

Canadian tax considerations for rental income

Tax FactorImpact
Rental incomeFully taxable at your marginal rate
Mortgage interestDeductible against rental income
Property taxesDeductible against rental income
Insurance, maintenance, managementDeductible against rental income
CCA (depreciation)Can shelter income, but recaptured on sale
Capital gains on sale50% inclusion rate (first $250K), 66.7% above
Principal residence exemptionNot available for investment properties
HST/GSTGenerally not applicable to long-term residential rentals

After-tax return example (Ontario, $100K income + rental)

Line ItemAnnual Amount
Gross rental income$30,000
Less: Deductible expenses (including mortgage interest)−$22,000
Taxable rental income$8,000
Marginal tax rate (Ontario, $100K+ income)~43%
Tax on rental income−$3,440
After-tax cash impact$30,000 − $22,000 − $3,440 = $4,560

Red flags when evaluating rental properties

Red FlagWhy It Matters
Cap rate below 3%Heavily dependent on appreciation to be profitable
Cash-on-cash return deeply negativeYou’re subsidizing the property over $500/month
GRM above 20Price is very high relative to rent
Vacancy rate above 8% in the areaIncome projections may be unreliable
Condo fees above $600/monthFees erode yield and increase unpredictably
Deferred maintenance costsLarge upcoming expenses not reflected in the price
Rent-controlled units below marketLimited ability to increase rents
Special assessment history (condo)Risk of surprise five-figure costs

Making your decision

  1. Screen with gross yield and GRM — eliminate properties below 4% gross yield or above GRM 20 unless you have a strong appreciation thesis
  2. Calculate NOI and cap rate — compare to market benchmarks for the area
  3. Run cash-on-cash return with your financing — determine whether you can sustain the carrying costs
  4. Factor in total return — include principal paydown, tax benefits, and expected appreciation
  5. Stress test at higher rates — what happens if your rate is 1–2% higher at renewal?
  6. Compare to passive alternatives — could your capital earn a similar return with less effort in REITs or equities?

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