How to Calculate Rental Yield

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Rental yield is the #1 metric for any property investor. Yet many beginners confuse gross, net, and net-net yield, which completely skews their analysis. This guide explains all three calculation methods with concrete examples and pitfalls to avoid.

1. Gross Yield: The Basic Calculation

Gross yield is the simplest and quickest calculation. It provides a rough first assessment of a property, but doesn't reflect the reality of your investment.

Gross Yield Formula

Gross Yield = (Annual Rent / Purchase Price) × 100

📊 Real Example

2-bedroom apartment in Lyon:

• Purchase price: €180,000

• Monthly rent: €750

• Annual rent: €750 × 12 = €9,000

Gross yield = (9,000 / 180,000) × 100 = 5%

Limitations of gross yield:

⚠️ Warning: Only use gross yield for an initial quick filter between properties. It systematically overestimates actual performance by 1.5 to 3 percentage points. This is the #1 mistake first-time investors make.

2. Net Yield: The Realistic Calculation

Net yield incorporates all charges and fees related to your investment. This is the calculation every serious investor should master.

Net Yield Formula

Net Yield = [(Annual Rent - Costs) / Total Cost] × 100

Costs to deduct:

Total acquisition cost:

📊 Real Example (same property)

2-bedroom apartment in Lyon:

• Purchase price: €180,000

• Notary fees (7.5%): €13,500

Total cost: €193,500

 

• Annual rent: €9,000

• Property tax: -€800

• Non-recoverable charges: -€600

• Landlord insurance: -€200

• Maintenance (4%): -€360

• Vacancy (1 month): -€750

Net income: €5,290

 

Net yield = (5,290 / 193,500) × 100 = 2.73%

From 5% gross to 2.73% net—a difference of 2.27 percentage points. This is why gross yield alone is misleading.

3. Net-Net Yield: After Tax

Net-net yield (or after-tax yield) is the final calculation that accounts for your personal tax situation. This is what actually remains in your pocket.

Net-Net Yield Formula

Net-Net Yield = [(Net Income - Tax) / Total Cost] × 100

Rental income taxation:

Unfurnished rental

Furnished rental

💡 Tip: The choice of tax regime can transform an average investment into an excellent one. With furnished rental under the real regime, property depreciation often completely neutralizes taxation for many years.

4. Yield Comparison Table

Type Calculation Use Case
Gross Rent / Price Quick initial filter
Net Including costs Comparing properties
Net-Net After tax Final decision

5. What Yield to Target in 2026?

Yield benchmarks vary by market and your strategy:

Gross Yield Rating Where to find?
< 4% Low Paris, Lyon center, Nice
4-6% Decent Major cities
6-8% Good Dynamic medium cities
8-10% Very good Small towns, suburbs
> 10% Excellent (check carefully) Potential risk areas

⚠️ Caution: A very high yield (>10%) often hides risks: difficult neighborhood, deteriorated property, high vacancy, problematic tenants. Always analyze the context before getting excited about an attractive rate.

6. Pitfalls to Avoid

Summary

Rental yield comes in three levels: gross (for initial filtering), net (for comparing properties), and net-net (for final decisions). The difference between gross and net can exceed 2 points, which radically changes an investment's attractiveness.

Before any purchase, systematically calculate net yield including all costs. And don't forget that yield is just one criterion among many: location, capital appreciation potential, and property quality also matter.

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