Income Capitalization Approach
Income Cap Approach in Practice
An appraiser concludes a stabilized office property generates $1,050,000 of net operating income and selects a 7.0% capitalization rate from comparable sales. Direct capitalization gives a value of $1,050,000 / 0.07 = $15,000,000, supporting a $9,750,000 loan at 65% LTV. Had the appraiser selected 7.5% instead, value falls to $1,050,000 / 0.075 = $14,000,000, cutting maximum proceeds at 65% LTV to $9,100,000, a $650,000 reduction driven entirely by the cap rate conclusion.
Income Cap Approach: What the Market Actually Requires
Appraisals in commercial real estate weigh three approaches, cost, sales comparison, and income capitalization, and for stabilized income property the income approach effectively decides the number, with sales comparison as a check and cost relevant mainly for new construction and special-use assets. Within the income approach, direct capitalization handles stabilized properties in a single step, while discounted cash flow models are used where income is changing: lease-up, heavy rollover, or value-add plans. Transitional deals typically get both an as-is and an as-stabilized value, and bridge lenders size against each with separate tests.
Borrowers are often surprised that the appraiser's NOI is not their NOI, and the lender's is a third number. Appraisers build NOI from market rent and expense conclusions, which may sit above or below actual operations; lenders then underwrite their own NOI, usually the most conservative of the three, layering in vacancy floors, replacement reserves, and management fees. When the appraisal comes in light, the LTV condition in the loan commitment converts the shortfall directly into a proceeds cut, which is why the cap rate selection, a judgment call built from comparable sales, is the highest-leverage single number in the report.
Process matters too. Banks and life companies order appraisals through approved panels, and the report belongs to the lender, not the borrower; agency and CMBS lending add their own review layers that can adjust values downward. Formally contesting an appraisal rarely succeeds, but providing the appraiser with complete, accurate information up front, the current rent roll, executed leases, a documented budget, and relevant comps, is legitimate and effective. Deals lose value in appraisals more often from missing information than from bad judgment.
Why It Matters for Your Loan
The income capitalization approach produces the value that your LTV constraint prices against, so a 50 basis point difference of opinion on the cap rate can move maximum proceeds by hundreds of thousands of dollars. Understanding whether your deal will be valued by direct capitalization or DCF, and whether the binding number is as-is or as-stabilized, tells you which lenders can hit your proceeds target. Commercial Lending Solutions underwrites value the way appraisers and lenders will before a deal goes out, so appraisal surprises get caught before they cost proceeds.
Income Cap Approach: FAQ
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