About House Flip Calculator

Free house flip calculator. Enter purchase price, renovation costs, ARV, and holding costs to calculate your flip profit, ROI, and 70% rule compliance instantly.

How to use

  1. Enter the property purchase price and your estimated total renovation budget. Break renovation costs into categories: structural, kitchen, bathrooms, flooring, paint, exterior, landscaping, permits, and a 15-20% contingency for unexpected issues. Underestimating rehab costs is the most common reason flips lose money.
  2. Input the after-repair value (ARV) based on recent comparable sales in the immediate neighborhood. Use properties that sold in the last 3-6 months with similar square footage, bedrooms, bathrooms, and finishes. Be conservative — overestimating ARV by even 10% can eliminate your entire profit margin.
  3. Add monthly holding costs including mortgage/hard money loan interest, property taxes, insurance, utilities, and maintenance. At 12% hard money rates on a $200,000 loan, interest alone is $2,000/month. A 6-month flip accumulates $12,000 in interest costs.
  4. Set your expected project timeline from purchase to sale. Include rehab time (2-6 months), listing period (1-3 months), and closing period (30-60 days). Every extra month adds holding costs that eat into profit.
  5. Include selling costs: real estate agent commissions (4-6% of sale price in Canada, 5-6% in the US), closing costs (1-2% for sellers), staging, professional photography, and any buyer credits or concessions.
  6. Review your projected net profit, ROI, and the 70% rule assessment. The calculator shows whether the deal meets the fundamental viability threshold. If your profit margin is thin, identify which costs could be reduced to improve the outcome.
  7. Run worst-case scenarios: what if rehab takes 2 months longer? What if the property sells for 5% less than ARV? What if holding costs increase? A good flip still works under moderate stress conditions.

Frequently asked questions

What is the 70% rule in house flipping?
The 70% rule states that you should pay no more than 70% of the after-repair value (ARV) minus repair costs. On a property with a $300,000 ARV and $50,000 in needed repairs, your maximum purchase price is ($300,000 x 0.70) - $50,000 = $160,000. This 30% margin covers your holding costs, selling costs, and profit. If you pay more than the 70% rule allows, your profit margin shrinks dangerously. The rule is a quick screening tool — always run the full numbers afterward, but if a deal does not pass the 70% rule, it rarely works out profitably.
What profit margin should I target on a flip?
Target a minimum net profit of 10-15% of the ARV, or at least $30,000-$50,000 per flip. Experienced flippers aim for 20% or more on higher-risk projects. On a $300,000 ARV property, you should net at least $30,000-$45,000 after all costs (purchase, rehab, holding, selling). Anything less than $20,000 net profit is generally not worth the risk, time, and effort involved — one unexpected foundation issue, delayed permit, or market softening can eliminate a thin profit entirely. Factor in your time investment: if a flip takes 6 months and nets $25,000, your effective hourly rate may be lower than a regular job. Use the Closing Cost Calculator to get an accurate estimate of your selling costs before finalizing your profit projection.
What are typical holding costs for a flip?
Monthly holding costs include: hard money or bridge loan interest (8-14% annually, or $1,000-$2,500/month on a $200,000 loan), property taxes ($200-$600/month), insurance ($100-$200/month), utilities ($150-$300/month), and lawn/snow maintenance ($100-$200/month). Total monthly holding costs typically range from $1,500 to $3,500. Over a 6-month project, that is $9,000-$21,000 that must come out of your profit. This is why speed matters in flipping — every month of delay directly reduces your profit dollar for dollar.
How long does a typical house flip take?
Cosmetic flips (paint, flooring, fixtures, landscaping, minor kitchen/bath updates) take 2-4 months from purchase to listing. Moderate rehabs (full kitchen remodel, bathroom additions, roof replacement) take 4-6 months. Major renovations (structural changes, additions, foundation work, full gut) take 6-12 months. Add 1-3 months for listing and selling, plus 30-60 days for closing. In hot markets, the selling period is shorter. In slow markets, budget extra months. Your timeline directly affects holding costs and overall profitability.
How much money do I need to start flipping houses?
Your total capital requirement includes: down payment on the purchase (10-30% for hard money loans, 20-25% for conventional), rehab costs (funded by your lender, your own cash, or a combination), holding costs for the project duration, and a cash reserve for unexpected expenses. On a typical $200,000 purchase with $50,000 in rehab: a hard money lender requiring 20% down needs $40,000 for the down payment, $50,000 for rehab (some lenders fund 100% of rehab), and $15,000 for holding costs — roughly $80,000-$105,000 total. Some investors start with less by partnering with others or using private money.
What renovations give the best ROI on a flip?
Highest ROI renovations for flipping: kitchen updates (80-120% ROI — new countertops, cabinet refinishing, modern hardware, and appliances), bathroom remodels (70-100% ROI), fresh paint throughout (300-500% ROI — the cheapest high-impact improvement), new flooring (100-150% ROI for replacing carpet with LVP or hardwood), curb appeal improvements like landscaping and a new front door (100-200% ROI). Lowest ROI for flips: swimming pools, luxury additions, finished basements in markets where they are uncommon, and ultra-high-end finishes in mid-range neighborhoods. Match your finishes to the neighborhood standard — over-improving is a common mistake.
Do I pay taxes on house flip profits?
Yes. In Canada, house flip profits are typically taxed as business income (100% taxable at your marginal rate), not capital gains. The CRA specifically targets frequent property transactions, and a property held for less than 12 months is almost always treated as inventory rather than a capital asset. At a 40% marginal rate, a $50,000 flip profit yields only $30,000 after tax. In the US, flips held less than one year are taxed as short-term capital gains (ordinary income rates, 22-37%), while properties held over one year qualify for long-term capital gains rates (0-20%). Factor taxes into your profit projections from the start.

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