Last Updated: January 22, 2026
Author: Shaun Ghavami, Co-Founder at 10XBNB
Reading Time: 10 minutes
Quick Answer: How to Calculate Rental Arbitrage Profitability
Rental arbitrage profit formula:
Monthly Profit = (ADR × Nights Booked) - Monthly Rent - Operating Expenses
Where:
- ADR (Average Daily Rate): Your average nightly rate
- Nights Booked: Occupancy rate × 30 days
- Monthly Rent: Fixed monthly lease payment
- Operating Expenses: Utilities, cleaning, platform fees, maintenance, insurance
Example calculation:
- ADR: $160
- Occupancy: 70% (21 nights/month)
- Monthly revenue: $160 × 21 = $3,360
- Monthly rent: $1,900
- Operating expenses: $900
- Monthly profit: $560
Cash-on-cash return:
ROI = (Annual Profit / Startup Investment) × 100
Example: $560/month × 12 = $6,720 annual profit ÷ $10,000 investment = 67.2% ROI
This calculator guide is part of our complete rental arbitrage guide. For related topics, see our startup costs breakdown and best markets analysis.
Introduction
Calculating rental arbitrage profitability is essential before investing in your first property. Understanding the numbers helps you choose the right markets, set realistic expectations, and make informed decisions about scaling.
This comprehensive calculator guide includes formulas, real-world examples, sensitivity analysis, and common calculation mistakes. You’ll learn exactly how to calculate your potential income, ROI, and break-even point—and how to use these calculations to make better business decisions.
Key takeaway: Accurate profit calculations prevent costly mistakes. According to 10XBNB’s 2026 Student Success Survey, operators who calculated profitability before starting had 34% higher success rates than those who didn’t.
Profit Calculation Formula
Basic Profit Formula
Monthly Profit = Monthly Revenue – Monthly Expenses
Where:
- Monthly Revenue = ADR × Nights Booked
- Monthly Expenses = Rent + Operating Expenses
Detailed Formula Breakdown
Step 1: Calculate Monthly Revenue
Monthly Revenue = ADR × (Occupancy Rate × 30 days)
Step 2: Calculate Monthly Expenses
Monthly Expenses = Rent + Utilities + Cleaning + Platform Fees + Maintenance + Insurance
Step 3: Calculate Monthly Profit
Monthly Profit = Monthly Revenue - Monthly Expenses
Step 4: Calculate Annual Profit
Annual Profit = Monthly Profit × 12
Step 5: Calculate Cash-on-Cash Return
ROI = (Annual Profit / Startup Investment) × 100
Example Calculation: Nashville, TN
Inputs:
- ADR: $210
- Occupancy: 65% (19.5 nights/month)
- Monthly rent: $1,900
- Utilities: $200
- Cleaning: $500 (19.5 nights × $25.64 average)
- Platform fees: $273 (8% of $3,409 revenue)
- Maintenance: $250
- Insurance: $150
- Startup investment: $10,000
Calculations:
- Monthly revenue: $210 × 19.5 = $4,095
- Monthly expenses: $1,900 + $200 + $500 + $273 + $250 + $150 = $3,273
- Monthly profit: $4,095 – $3,273 = $822
- Annual profit: $822 × 12 = $9,864
- ROI: ($9,864 / $10,000) × 100 = 98.6%
Interactive Calculator (Embedded Tool)
Note: For a fully interactive calculator, embed a JavaScript calculator tool on your website. Below is the calculation framework you can use.
Calculator Inputs
Property Details:
- Number of bedrooms: [Input]
- Property location: [Input]
- Monthly rent: [Input]
Revenue Assumptions:
- Average Daily Rate (ADR): [Input]
- Occupancy rate: [Input] (%)
Expense Assumptions:
- Utilities: [Input] ($/month)
- Cleaning cost per turnover: [Input] ($)
- Platform fees: [Input] (%)
- Maintenance reserve: [Input] ($/month)
- Insurance: [Input] ($/month)
Investment:
- Startup investment: [Input] ($)
Calculator Outputs
Monthly Metrics:
- Monthly revenue: [Calculated]
- Monthly expenses: [Calculated]
- Monthly profit: [Calculated]
Annual Metrics:
- Annual revenue: [Calculated]
- Annual expenses: [Calculated]
- Annual profit: [Calculated]
Return Metrics:
- Cash-on-cash return: [Calculated] (%)
- Payback period: [Calculated] (months)
- Break-even occupancy: [Calculated] (%)
Input Variables Explained
ADR (Average Daily Rate)
What it is: Your average nightly rate across all bookings.
How to find it:
- Use AirDNA market data
- Analyze competitor listings in your market
- Check historical booking data (if available)
Typical ranges:
- Budget markets: $100-$150/night
- Mid-tier markets: $150-$250/night
- Premium markets: $250-$400+/night
Factors affecting ADR:
- Property location and neighborhood
- Property size and amenities
- Seasonality and demand
- Competition and market saturation
- Listing optimization and reviews
Occupancy Rate
What it is: Percentage of nights booked per month.
How to calculate:
Occupancy Rate = (Nights Booked / 30) × 100
Typical ranges:
- Strong markets: 65-75% average
- Moderate markets: 55-65% average
- Challenging markets: 45-55% average
Factors affecting occupancy:
- Market demand and tourism
- Seasonality (peak vs. off-peak)
- Listing optimization and reviews
- Pricing strategy
- Competition level
According to 10XBNB’s 2026 Student Success Survey:
- Hybrid markets: 85% average occupancy
- STR-only markets: 62% average occupancy
- Regulated markets: 58% average occupancy
Monthly Rent
What it is: Fixed monthly lease payment to landlord.
Typical ranges:
- 1-bedroom: $1,200-$1,800/month
- 2-bedroom: $1,500-$2,500/month
- 3-bedroom: $2,000-$3,500/month
Negotiation tips:
- Some landlords accept slightly higher rent for STR approval
- Longer lease terms (18-24 months) may reduce rent
- Professional presentation increases approval rates
Operating Expenses
Utilities:
- Electricity: $100-$200/month
- Water/sewer: $50-$100/month
- Internet: $50-$100/month
- Total: $150-$300/month
Cleaning:
- Cost per turnover: $100-$150
- Frequency: Based on occupancy
- Monthly: $400-$800 (varies by bookings)
Platform Fees:
- Airbnb: 3% host fee
- Vrbo: 8% commission
- Booking.com: 15% commission
- Average: 8-10% of revenue
Maintenance:
- Budget: 5-10% of monthly revenue
- Typical: $200-$400/month
Insurance:
- STR insurance: $100-$200/month
- Typical: $150/month
Total Operating Expenses:
- Typical range: $800-$1,200/month (varies by property size and occupancy)
Real-World Profit Examples by Market
Example 1: Nashville, TN (Hybrid Market)
Property: 2-bedroom apartment
Market Type: Hybrid (STR + medium-term rentals)
Inputs:
- ADR: $210
- Occupancy: 65% (19.5 nights/month)
- Monthly rent: $1,900
- Utilities: $200
- Cleaning: $500
- Platform fees: $273 (8%)
- Maintenance: $250
- Insurance: $150
Calculations:
- Monthly revenue: $4,095
- Monthly expenses: $3,273
- Monthly profit: $822
- Annual profit: $9,864
- ROI (on $10,000 investment): 98.6%
Example 2: Phoenix, AZ (Hybrid Market)
Property: 2-bedroom apartment
Market Type: Hybrid
Inputs:
- ADR: $180
- Occupancy: 60% (18 nights/month)
- Monthly rent: $1,900
- Utilities: $180
- Cleaning: $450
- Platform fees: $259 (8%)
- Maintenance: $230
- Insurance: $150
Calculations:
- Monthly revenue: $3,240
- Monthly expenses: $3,149
- Monthly profit: $91
- Annual profit: $1,092
- ROI (on $10,000 investment): 10.9%
Note: This example shows lower profitability due to lower ADR and occupancy. Market selection is critical.
Example 3: Savannah, GA (Tourism Market)
Property: 2-bedroom apartment
Market Type: STR-only (tourism-driven)
Inputs:
- ADR: $291
- Occupancy: 58% (17.4 nights/month)
- Monthly rent: $1,900
- Utilities: $200
- Cleaning: $435
- Platform fees: $295 (8%)
- Maintenance: $250
- Insurance: $150
Calculations:
- Monthly revenue: $5,063
- Monthly expenses: $3,230
- Monthly profit: $1,833
- Annual profit: $21,996
- ROI (on $10,000 investment): 220%
Note: Higher ADR compensates for lower occupancy in tourism markets.
Sensitivity Analysis: What-If Scenarios
Sensitivity analysis shows how profit changes when key variables change. This helps you understand risk and set realistic expectations.
Base Case Scenario
Assumptions:
- ADR: $160
- Occupancy: 70% (21 nights/month)
- Monthly rent: $1,900
- Operating expenses: $900
Results:
- Monthly revenue: $3,360
- Monthly profit: $560
Scenario 1: ADR Decreases 10% ($144)
New calculations:
- Monthly revenue: $3,024
- Monthly profit: $224 (60% decrease)
Impact: ADR changes have significant impact on profitability. A 10% ADR decrease reduces profit by 60% in this example.
Scenario 2: Occupancy Decreases 10% (63%)
New calculations:
- Nights booked: 18.9 (down from 21)
- Monthly revenue: $3,024
- Monthly profit: $224 (60% decrease)
Impact: Occupancy changes have similar impact to ADR changes. Both are critical variables.
Scenario 3: Rent Increases 10% ($2,090)
New calculations:
- Monthly revenue: $3,360 (unchanged)
- Monthly expenses: $2,090 + $900 = $2,990
- Monthly profit: $370 (34% decrease)
Impact: Rent increases reduce profit but have less impact than ADR or occupancy changes.
Scenario 4: Combined Negative (ADR -10% + Occupancy -10%)
New calculations:
- ADR: $144
- Occupancy: 63% (18.9 nights)
- Monthly revenue: $2,722
- Monthly expenses: $2,800
- Monthly profit: -$78 (operating at a loss)
Impact: Combined negative changes can push properties into unprofitability. Maintain operating reserves.
Key Insights from Sensitivity Analysis
- ADR and occupancy are critical: Small changes have large profit impact
- Maintain operating reserves: Protect against negative scenarios
- Market selection matters: Choose markets with strong demand and stable ADR
- Monitor key metrics: Track ADR and occupancy monthly to catch issues early
Cash-on-Cash Return Calculations
Cash-on-cash return measures annual profit as a percentage of your initial investment.
Formula
Cash-on-Cash Return = (Annual Profit / Startup Investment) × 100
Example Calculations
Example 1:
- Startup investment: $8,000
- Monthly profit: $1,200
- Annual profit: $14,400
- ROI: 180%
Example 2:
- Startup investment: $12,000
- Monthly profit: $800
- Annual profit: $9,600
- ROI: 80%
Example 3:
- Startup investment: $15,000
- Monthly profit: $600
- Annual profit: $7,200
- ROI: 48%
Target Benchmarks
Conservative target: 30-60% annual return
Moderate target: 60-120% annual return
Aggressive target: 120-180%+ annual return
According to 10XBNB’s 2026 Student Success Survey:
- Average ROI: 67% (based on $10,000 average investment and $560 average monthly profit)
- Top quartile ROI: 120%+
- Bottom quartile ROI: 30-40%
Break-Even Analysis
Break-even analysis calculates the minimum occupancy or ADR needed to cover all expenses.
Break-Even Occupancy
Formula:
Break-Even Occupancy = (Monthly Expenses / ADR) / 30 × 100
Example:
- Monthly expenses: $2,800
- ADR: $160
- Break-even nights: $2,800 / $160 = 17.5 nights
- Break-even occupancy: 58.3%
Interpretation: You need at least 58.3% occupancy to break even. Any occupancy above this generates profit.
Break-Even ADR
Formula:
Break-Even ADR = Monthly Expenses / (Occupancy Rate × 30)
Example:
- Monthly expenses: $2,800
- Occupancy: 70% (21 nights)
- Break-even ADR: $133.33
Interpretation: You need at least $133.33 ADR to break even at 70% occupancy.
Using Break-Even Analysis
Before signing a lease:
- Calculate break-even occupancy for the property’s ADR
- Verify market occupancy exceeds break-even
- Build in 10-15% margin above break-even for profit
During operations:
- Monitor actual occupancy vs. break-even
- Adjust pricing if occupancy drops below break-even
- Consider exit if consistently below break-even
Common Calculation Mistakes
Mistake 1: Underestimating Operating Expenses
Error: Only counting rent and utilities, missing cleaning, platform fees, maintenance.
Correct approach: Include all operating expenses:
- Rent
- Utilities
- Cleaning (based on actual turnover frequency)
- Platform fees (8-10% of revenue)
- Maintenance (5-10% of revenue)
- Insurance
Impact: Underestimating expenses by 20% can turn a profitable property into an unprofitable one.
Mistake 2: Overestimating Occupancy
Error: Planning for 80-90% occupancy (unrealistic).
Correct approach: Use market data:
- Industry average: 56-62% occupancy
- Hybrid markets: 65-75% average
- STR-only markets: 55-65% average
- Build in 5-10% buffer below market average for conservative planning
Impact: Overestimating occupancy by 20% can overstate profit by 40-50%.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Seasonality
Error: Using peak season ADR and occupancy for annual projections.
Correct approach: Calculate monthly projections accounting for seasonality:
- Peak season: Higher ADR and occupancy
- Off-peak season: Lower ADR and occupancy
- Annual average: Weighted average of all months
Impact: Ignoring seasonality can overstate annual profit by 20-30%.
Mistake 4: Not Accounting for Platform Fees
Error: Calculating revenue as ADR × nights without deducting platform fees.
Correct approach: Platform fees are 8-10% of revenue. Calculate:
Net Revenue = Gross Revenue × (1 - Platform Fee %)
Impact: Forgetting platform fees overstates profit by 8-10%.
Mistake 5: Using List Price Instead of Actual ADR
Error: Using listing price as ADR without accounting for discounts, promotions, or lower-demand periods.
Correct approach: Use actual historical ADR data or market averages from AirDNA.
Impact: Using list price instead of actual ADR can overstate profit by 15-25%.
Using Calculations for Decision-Making
Market Selection
Use calculations to:
- Compare profitability across markets
- Identify markets with highest ROI potential
- Avoid markets with low profit margins
Example: Compare Nashville ($822/month profit) vs. Phoenix ($91/month profit) to choose better market.
Property Selection
Use calculations to:
- Evaluate rent vs. potential revenue
- Assess if property can meet profit targets
- Negotiate better lease terms
Example: If calculations show low profit, negotiate lower rent or find different property.
Pricing Strategy
Use calculations to:
- Set ADR to meet profit targets
- Adjust pricing for seasonality
- Optimize for occupancy vs. ADR
Example: If break-even is 58% occupancy, price to achieve 65-70% occupancy for profit margin.
Scaling Decisions
Use calculations to:
- Determine if you have capital for additional properties
- Project total portfolio profitability
- Plan for operating reserves
Example: If each property generates $560/month profit, 3 properties = $1,680/month total profit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate are rental arbitrage profit calculations?
Profit calculations are estimates based on assumptions (ADR, occupancy, expenses). Accuracy depends on using realistic market data. According to 10XBNB data, operators who calculated profitability before starting had 34% higher success rates. Use market data from AirDNA or similar tools for more accurate projections.
What’s a good ROI for rental arbitrage?
Target ROI depends on your goals and risk tolerance:
- Conservative: 30-60% annual return
- Moderate: 60-120% annual return
- Aggressive: 120-180%+ annual return
According to 10XBNB’s 2026 Student Success Survey, average ROI is 67%, with top performers achieving 120%+.
How do I calculate profit if I don’t know the ADR yet?
Use market data from AirDNA or analyze competitor listings in your target market. Look at similar properties (bedrooms, location, amenities) and calculate average nightly rate. Build in 10-15% buffer below market average for conservative planning.
What’s the minimum occupancy needed for profitability?
Minimum occupancy depends on your ADR and expenses. Use break-even analysis:
Break-Even Occupancy = (Monthly Expenses / ADR) / 30 × 100
Typical break-even occupancy ranges from 50-65% depending on market and property. Aim for 10-15% above break-even for profit margin.
Should I use peak season or average occupancy for calculations?
Use average occupancy across all months, accounting for seasonality. Peak season occupancy is unrealistic for annual projections. Calculate monthly projections and average them, or use market data that accounts for seasonality.
Conclusion
Accurate profit calculations are essential for rental arbitrage success. Understanding the numbers helps you choose the right markets, set realistic expectations, and make informed decisions about scaling.
Key takeaways:
- Use the profit formula: Monthly Profit = (ADR × Nights Booked) – Rent – Operating Expenses
- Account for all expenses: rent, utilities, cleaning, platform fees, maintenance, insurance
- Use realistic occupancy: 55-70% average (not 80-90%)
- Calculate break-even: Know minimum occupancy or ADR needed
- Run sensitivity analysis: Understand how changes affect profit
Ready to calculate your rental arbitrage profitability? Use the formulas and examples in this guide, or join 10XBNB for our proprietary calculator tools and market data.
Related Guides
- Complete Rental Arbitrage Guide – The ultimate guide to rental arbitrage
- Rental Arbitrage Startup Costs – Complete breakdown of startup costs
- Best Markets for Rental Arbitrage 2026 – Market analysis and selection
- Rental Arbitrage Profitability – Detailed profitability analysis
Last updated: January 22, 2026. Calculations based on 2026 market data and proprietary research from 1,247 successful 10XBNB students.












