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RentvsBuyIndia

Property Investment Calculator

Buying a flat to rent out feels like a safe bet. This calculator checks it: landlord returns — rent, vacancies, tenant churn, appreciation — against simply investing the same money, rupee for rupee.

Your investment property

Property & loan

%

0% = cash purchase

years

% p.a.

Investment properties often cost a little more than 8.75%

Stamp duty 5–7% + registration

To make it lettable

Rental income

%/yr

years

months

mo rent

Owner costs & growth

%/yr

%/yr

Average over your whole holding period — new buildings appreciate faster than old ones

Comparison
years

Can run past the loan

%

Brokerage, transfer

% p.a.

What the same money could earn (index funds ~10–12%)

A rental flat earns three ways — rent, appreciation and leverage — and leaks in ways spreadsheets forget: vacant months, brokerage, repaints, taxes and selling costs. This calculator pits the full landlord ledger against simply investing the same money.

How it works

  1. Describe the property, the loan and the rent you expect it to earn.
  2. Every month is simulated: rent flows in while occupied, EMI and upkeep flow out, and each tenant changeover costs vacancy, brokerage and a repaint.
  3. At exit the property is sold net of costs and compared with what the same money would have become in investments.

Before you start

  • Tenant stay: drives everything — shorter stays mean more vacancies, brokerage and repaints.
  • Appreciation: use an average for your full holding period; new buildings appreciate faster than old ones.
  • Hold period: run it past the loan tenure to see the years of EMI-free rental income.

You'll get

  • A verdict: rental property or financial investments
  • Gross and net rental yield for your numbers
  • A wealth chart and year-by-year table
  • The full cash-flow detail as a CSV

What this comparison actually counts

Rental property maths usually stops at "rent covers part of the EMI, and the flat appreciates". The real ledger is longer: the property sits empty between tenants, every changeover costs a repaint and a broker's fee, maintenance and property tax never stop, and selling costs take a slice at exit. Meanwhile the down payment, stamp duty and every month the property runs at a loss is money that could have compounded elsewhere.

This calculator builds both ledgers month by month with the same rupees on each side — whatever the landlord pays in, the investor invests instead; whenever rent runs a surplus, the landlord invests it too. At the end of your holding period it compares the property sold (net of selling costs and any outstanding loan) plus the reinvested surpluses against the investment portfolio.

Property investment, answered

Is buying a rental property a good investment in India?
Often not on rent alone: gross rental yields in Indian metros run at just 2–4% of the property price, while home loans cost 8–9%. The case for buy-to-let rests on price appreciation and leverage. This calculator plays out both forces against simply investing the same money — down payment, stamp duty, and every monthly shortfall — at your expected return.
What is a good rental yield in India?
Gross yields of 2.5–4% are typical for residential property in large Indian cities. The net yield — after vacancies between tenants, brokerage, repainting, society maintenance, property tax and insurance — is usually 1–2 percentage points lower. The calculator shows both for your numbers.
Does the calculator include income tax on rental income?
No — like every calculator on this site, it compares pre-tax cash flows. In reality rental income is taxable after a 30% standard deduction under Section 24(a), and home-loan interest on a let-out property is deductible under Section 24(b), while your alternative investments face capital gains tax. Post-tax results will differ; treat this as the clean pre-tax comparison.
Which landlord costs does it count?
Tenant churn is modelled directly: every time a tenant leaves, the property sits vacant for the months you specify, gets repainted, and a broker is paid when the next tenant moves in. On top of that it counts society maintenance with inflation, property tax, insurance, one-time purchase and furnishing costs, and selling costs when you exit. The interest-free float from the tenant’s security deposit is ignored as immaterial.
What property appreciation rate should I use?
The average annual rate you expect over your entire holding period — not the rate a new building manages in its early years. In this model appreciation only affects the sale value at exit (rent is set independently of property value), so a blended average gives the right verdict: a flat that gains 8% a year while new but slows as the building ages might average just 4–5% over a 20-year hold. Older or poorly maintained buildings can end up trading close to land value alone, so long holds deserve conservative numbers.
Why does it show total return instead of IRR?
Both paths receive exactly the same money at exactly the same times — the initial outlay plus every month the property runs at a loss. Because the cash flows are identical, comparing final wealth (and the simple total return on money put in) ranks the two options the same way an IRR would, without the false precision.
Is my financial data private?
Completely. Every calculation runs in your browser — nothing you enter is transmitted or stored.

Deciding where to live rather than what to buy? Use theRent vs Buy Calculator. Checking what you can afford first? Try theAffordability Calculator.