The Break-Even Math Isn’t Hard — But It’s Everything
How to Calculate Break-Even Rent in Las Vegas—and Why It’s Critical for Investors
Everyone loves talking about cash flow. But the real question is: do you know your break-even point?
Your break-even rent is the minimum monthly income you need to cover every expense related to your rental property. If you don’t know that number, you’re not investing—you’re gambling.
💡 Why Break-Even Math Matters
Break-even analysis protects you from:
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Overpaying on the purchase
-
Underestimating costs
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Misjudging rent-to-expense ratios
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Buying properties that “look good on paper” but bleed cash
Knowing this number up front means no surprises when markets shift, rents drop, or repairs hit.
📊 The Simple Formula
To calculate your monthly break-even rent:
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Add up ALL monthly expenses
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Mortgage (P&I)
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Property taxes
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Insurance
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HOA (if applicable)
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Property management fees
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Maintenance/CapEx reserve
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Utilities (if owner-paid)
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Vacancy allowance
-
-
Divide total by number of rent-producing units
Example:
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4-unit property in Spring Valley
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Total monthly expenses = $4,940
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Break-even per unit = $1,235/month
If each unit rents for $1,550, you’ve got $1,260/month in net income. That’s what smart, cash-flow-based investing looks like.
📍 A Real Las Vegas Example
4-plex purchased for $750,000 (25% down):
|
Expense |
Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
|
Mortgage (P&I) |
$3,300 |
|
Property Taxes |
$200 |
|
Insurance |
$140 |
|
Management (8%) |
$500 |
|
Maintenance/Reserves |
$400 |
|
Vacancy Allowance |
$400 |
|
Total |
$4,940 |
At $1,550 average rent per unit, the investor clears $1,260/month after expenses—and can weather unexpected repairs or vacancies without losing money.
✅ HYDE Real Estate Group Break-Even Analysis
At HYDE, every client deal includes:
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Break-even rent projections
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Real operating cost breakdowns
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Market-specific rent comps
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Risk buffer modeling (vacancy, CapEx, etc.)
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Cash flow stress-testing
We don’t let you buy on guesswork—we make sure the math works before you write the offer.
🙋♂️
FAQs: Break-Even Math for Vegas Investors
1. What’s included in break-even rent?
All recurring expenses: mortgage, taxes, insurance, management, maintenance, reserves, and vacancy.
2. How much vacancy should I plan for?
We recommend budgeting 1 month per year, or ~8%, unless you’re in a high-turnover submarket.
3. Should I include capital expenditures (CapEx)?
Yes—plan for $50–$100/month/unit depending on age and condition.
4. What if my break-even rent is higher than market rent?
Walk away—or renegotiate the price. Don’t buy negative cash flow.
5. Does HYDE calculate this for me?
Absolutely. Every deal we analyze includes break-even math and projected cash flow.
6. Why do investors skip this step?
They assume cash flow will “work itself out.” It won’t. Know your numbers or risk your portfolio.
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