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💵 Cash Flow & Yield Analysis

Cash-on-Cash Return Calculator

Calculate annual cash yield on your equity investment for NNN, industrial, hotel, and master lease commercial real estate acquisitions. Full year-by-year model with IRR, DSCR, and equity multiple.

Annual Cash Yield Leverage Analysis Full CF Model Sensitivity Matrix
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CoC Benchmarks (2026)
Asset ClassYr 1 CoC Target
Core NNN Retail4–7%
Class A Industrial5–8%
Hotel (Select-Service)6–10%
Value-Add Industrial3–6% → 8–12%
Multifamily Core-Plus4–7%
Cash-on-Cash Formula
CoC = Annual Pre-Tax CF
      / Total Equity

Pre-Tax CF = NOI
           − Annual Debt Service

Equity = Down Payment
        + Closing Costs
        + CapEx at Closing

Cash-on-Cash Return: The Complete Guide

Cash-on-cash return (CoC) is the simplest and most intuitive measure of annual cash yield from a leveraged real estate investment. The formula is straightforward: divide your annual pre-tax cash flow (NOI minus annual debt service) by your total equity invested (down payment plus closing costs and upfront CapEx). The result tells you what percentage of your invested equity you're getting back as cash each year.

Unlike IRR, cash-on-cash doesn't account for the time value of money, equity paydown, or appreciation. Unlike cap rate, it accounts for the impact of debt financing. This makes CoC the ideal metric for answering the question: "How much cash will I actually receive this year relative to what I put in?"

Positive vs. Negative Leverage in CRE

Leverage is "positive" when the blended cost of debt is below the property's cap rate, meaning financing amplifies equity returns above the unlevered yield. Leverage is "negative" when borrowing costs exceed the cap rate, meaning every dollar of debt dilutes equity returns below the unlevered cap rate.

In 2022–2023, many US commercial real estate markets shifted to negative leverage as the Fed's rate hikes pushed borrowing costs above going-in cap rates. Assets that looked attractive at 5.5% cap rates with 3.5% debt suddenly faced 7%+ borrowing costs, making the levered CoC lower than the unlevered cap rate. This dynamic drove significant price corrections in office and multifamily sectors while NNN assets with long-term debt in place remained more insulated.

Cash-on-Cash vs. IRR: When to Use Each

Both cash-on-cash and IRR are essential metrics, but they measure different things. Cash-on-cash measures current yield — how much cash you're receiving today relative to your equity. IRR measures the total compounded return over the hold period, including income, appreciation, loan paydown, and the time value of each cash flow.

Use cash-on-cash when evaluating income adequacy — can this property fund distributions to investors? Use IRR when comparing investment alternatives with different risk profiles, hold periods, or capital structures. A high CoC with low IRR often means the property has strong current income but limited growth or appreciation. A low CoC with high IRR indicates most return comes from backend appreciation rather than current income.

How Leverage Affects Cash-on-Cash Returns

The most powerful driver of cash-on-cash return is leverage — the amount of debt financing you use relative to equity. More debt (higher LTV) amplifies CoC returns when leverage is positive, and amplifies losses when negative. This is why institutional investors are highly attuned to the spread between cap rates and debt costs (often called the "cap rate / debt constant spread").

Example: A property with a 6.5% cap rate financed at 65% LTV with a 5.8% debt constant generates approximately 8.0% Year 1 CoC — significantly above the 6.5% unlevered cap rate. The same property financed at 65% LTV with a 7.0% debt constant generates approximately 5.5% Year 1 CoC — below the unlevered cap rate. This is why borrowing conditions dramatically affect CRE investment economics.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does cash-on-cash return include mortgage principal paydown?
No. Cash-on-cash return only measures cash in your pocket relative to cash invested — it does not include the equity buildup from loan amortization. To capture the full return including equity paydown, use the equity multiple (total distributions + sale proceeds / equity invested) or IRR. This is an important distinction: two deals with the same cash-on-cash might have very different total returns if one uses interest-only financing (no paydown) versus fully amortizing financing.
How do I improve cash-on-cash return?
There are four ways to improve cash-on-cash return: (1) Increase NOI — higher rents, lower vacancy, or reduced operating expenses; (2) Use positive leverage — finance at a rate below the cap rate; (3) Use interest-only financing — eliminates amortization payments, boosting near-term cash flow at the cost of slower equity buildup; (4) Buy at a higher cap rate — the going-in cap is the ceiling for unlevered CoC return. For NNN master lease investments, the primary lever is the relationship between the rent level and the purchase price.
Is a 10% cash-on-cash return good in commercial real estate?
A 10% Year 1 cash-on-cash return is strong in most CRE contexts, typically indicating either a well-priced acquisition in a quality market, or a higher-risk asset with significant operational complexity. For reference, 10-Year Treasuries yield ~4.5% in mid-2026, so 10% CoC represents roughly a 550 basis point risk premium. This is achievable in select-service hotels, value-add industrial assets post-stabilization, or ground-lease retail in secondary markets. Core NNN investments with investment-grade tenants typically generate 4–7% CoC.
Can cash-on-cash be negative?
Yes — negative cash-on-cash occurs when annual debt service exceeds NOI. This happens in value-add acquisitions during lease-up periods, heavy-renovation phases, or when interest rates rise significantly above underwritten levels. Development deals are almost always negative CoC in years 1–3 before income stabilizes. Investors accepting negative CoC in early years are underwriting for back-end appreciation and stabilized cash flow growth that produces attractive IRRs despite initial negative cash yields.

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