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Rental Property ROI: Is It Still Worth It in 2026?

Is rental property a good investment in 2026? Calculate real ROI including vacancy, maintenance, property tax, and mortgage. Compare to stock market returns.

10 min read

The Real Numbers Most Landlords Ignore

New investors often calculate: Monthly Rent − Mortgage Payment = Profit. This ignores at least 6 major cost categories and routinely produces 2× overestimates of actual returns.

True Rental ROI requires accounting for:

  1. Vacancy (national average: 6–8% of gross rent)
  2. Property management (8–12% of gross rent if you hire)
  3. Maintenance & repairs (1% of property value per year, rule of thumb)
  4. CapEx (capital expenditures: roof, HVAC, appliances — typically 1–2%/year)
  5. Property taxes
  6. Landlord insurance (premium above homeowner's)
  7. Mortgage interest (non-deductible against rental income for high earners)

Full Example: $350,000 Rental Property (2026)

Purchase: $350,000, 20% down ($70,000), 30-year mortgage at 6.8%

Income/Expense Monthly Annual
Gross rent $2,200 $26,400
Vacancy (7%) −$154 −$1,848
Effective Gross Income $2,046 $24,552
Mortgage (P&I) −$1,832 −$21,984
Property tax (1.1%) −$321 −$3,850
Insurance −$100 −$1,200
Maintenance (1%) −$292 −$3,500
CapEx reserve (1%) −$146 −$1,750
Management fee (10%) −$205 −$2,455
Net Operating Income $10,797
Cash Flow After Mortgage −$452/mo −$5,413

This property cash flow negative at 20% down with professional management. The investor relies on appreciation and equity paydown for returns.


The Four Return Streams of Real Estate

Unlike stocks, real estate offers four distinct return mechanisms:

  1. Cash Flow: Monthly rent minus all expenses
  2. Appreciation: Property value increase (~3–4% historically, varies hugely by market)
  3. Equity Paydown: Tenant effectively paying down your mortgage
  4. Tax Benefits: Depreciation deduction (residential: 27.5 years)

Total Return (same $350k example):

Return Stream Annual
Cash flow −$5,413
Appreciation (3%) +$10,500
Equity paydown +$7,000 (year 1)
Tax benefit (depreciation) +$3,500 (at 24% bracket)
Net Total Return +$15,587

As % of $70,000 cash invested: 22.3% annualized — if appreciation holds. Without appreciation, you're near 0%.


Markets That Still Make Sense in 2026

High appreciation, low cash flow (takes patience):

  • Austin, TX / Phoenix, AZ / Nashville, TN (rent growth > mortgage cost for high-quality properties)

Strong cash flow, moderate appreciation:

  • Cleveland, OH / Memphis, TN / Indianapolis, IN / Kansas City, MO
  • Price-to-rent ratios of 12–15× vs 25–40× in coastal markets

The price-to-rent ratio divides median home price by annual rent. Below 15: strong cash flow market. Above 20: appreciation play.


When Stocks Beat Real Estate

Running $70,000 into an S&P 500 index fund instead:

  • At 7% average annual return: $70,000 → $533,000 in 30 years
  • No vacancies, no 3am maintenance calls, no evictions, no mortgage stress
  • Full liquidity anytime

Real estate wins when:

  • You leverage effectively (mortgage amplifies returns on equity)
  • Local market appreciation significantly outperforms national average
  • You self-manage and capture the 10% management fee as labor income
  • Tax benefits are maximized through real estate professional status or cost segregation

Use our Rental Property ROI Calculator to model your specific property.