Cash-on-Cash Return
Cash-on-Cash in Practice
An investor buys a $10,000,000 property with a $6,500,000 loan, investing $3,500,000 of equity plus $300,000 in closing costs and upfront reserves, $3,800,000 of total cash. The property produces $650,000 of NOI and the loan requires $422,000 of annual debt service, leaving $228,000 of pre-tax cash flow. Cash-on-cash return is $228,000 / $3,800,000 = 6.0%. An interest-only structure that cut annual debt service to $384,000 would lift cash flow to $266,000 and the cash yield to $266,000 / $3,800,000 = 7.0%, which is exactly why cash-flow buyers prize IO periods.
Cash-on-Cash: What the Market Actually Requires
Cash-on-cash is the yield investors actually feel: the distribution check divided by the money in the deal. It is a single-year, levered measure, which makes it the natural companion to cap rate (unlevered) and IRR (multi-year). Yield-focused investors, family offices, and 1031 exchange buyers tend to screen on cash-on-cash; institutional value-add players screen on IRR and treat early-year cash-on-cash as an afterthought.
Loan structure moves this number more than almost anything else. When the cap rate exceeds the loan constant, leverage is positive and each borrowed dollar lifts the cash yield on equity; when it does not, leverage drags. Interest-only periods are the biggest lever in practice: cutting principal payments out of debt service can lift cash-on-cash by multiple percentage points during the IO years, which is why agency loans with IO windows, bridge debt, and DSCR loan products are so popular with cash-flow buyers. The trap is symmetrical: when IO burns off, debt service steps up and the cash-on-cash you marketed to investors steps down.
Reasonable expectations by profile: stabilized core assets typically throw off 4% to 6% cash-on-cash at moderate leverage; stabilized value-add deals reach 7% to 9% or better once the business plan matures; and going-in cash-on-cash on a true heavy-lift deal is often near zero or negative, funded by reserves until income arrives. Common borrower mistakes include quoting IO-period cash-on-cash as if it were permanent, leaving closing costs and upfront reserves out of the invested-cash denominator, and ignoring capital expenditures that do not appear in NOI but absolutely consume distributable cash. Compute it on true all-in equity and true residual cash flow, or it will flatter every deal you model.
Why It Matters for Your Loan
For income-driven investors, cash-on-cash is the deal: it determines whether distributions cover investor preferred returns and whether the property outyields passive alternatives. Because financing structure drives it, the same building can produce a 4% or an 8% cash yield depending on leverage, amortization, and interest-only terms. Commercial Lending Solutions structures debt with the target cash-on-cash in mind, weighing IO periods, amortization, and leverage across capital sources so the loan supports the return story instead of fighting it.
Related Terms
Cash-on-Cash: FAQ
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