House Flipping Calculator: Estimate Your Flip Profit Before You Buy

Free tool ยท Updated March 2026 ยท By PropertyCEO

๐Ÿ“Š 1,000 monthly searches for "house flipping calculator" โ€” KD 0

Every successful house flip starts with one thing: the numbers. Before you sign a purchase agreement, before you hire a contractor, before you even walk the property a second time โ€” you need to know whether the deal actually makes money.

That's what this house flipping calculator does. Plug in your purchase price, estimated rehab costs, holding costs, selling costs, and after-repair value (ARV), and you'll see your projected net profit and return on investment instantly. No guesswork. No surprises.

๐Ÿ”จ House Flipping Profit Calculator

What you're paying for the property
Estimated sale price after renovations
Materials, labor, permits, contingency
Typically 1-2% of purchase price
Loan payments, taxes, insurance, utilities during hold
Agent commissions (5-6%) + closing costs (1-2%)
โ€”

How the House Flipping Calculator Works

This calculator uses the standard fix-and-flip profit formula that professional flippers rely on:

๐Ÿ“ Net Profit = ARV โˆ’ Purchase Price โˆ’ Rehab Costs โˆ’ Closing Costs (Buy) โˆ’ Holding Costs โˆ’ Selling Costs

Let's break down each input so you can estimate your numbers accurately, even if this is your first flip.

Purchase Price

This is the amount you're paying (or plan to offer) for the property. For a flip to work, you typically need to buy at a significant discount to market value. Most experienced flippers follow the 70% rule: don't pay more than 70% of the ARV minus repair costs.

๐Ÿ“ 70% Rule: Maximum Purchase Price = (ARV ร— 0.70) โˆ’ Rehab Costs

For example, if the ARV is $300,000 and rehab costs are $50,000, your maximum offer should be ($300,000 ร— 0.70) โˆ’ $50,000 = $160,000.

After-Repair Value (ARV)

ARV is the estimated market value of the property after all renovations are complete. This is the most important โ€” and most dangerous โ€” number in any flip. Overestimate ARV and your "profitable" deal turns into a loss.

To estimate ARV accurately:

Rehab / Renovation Costs

This is where most new flippers get burned. Renovation costs almost always exceed initial estimates. Here are typical cost ranges per square foot for different renovation levels:

Renovation LevelCost per Sq FtTypical Scope
Cosmetic$15 โ€“ $30Paint, flooring, fixtures, landscaping
Moderate$30 โ€“ $60Kitchen/bath remodel, new HVAC, some structural
Major$60 โ€“ $120Full gut, foundation work, additions, new systems
Luxury Finish$100 โ€“ $200+High-end finishes, custom work, smart home

Pro tip: Always add a 10-20% contingency on top of your contractor's estimate. Unexpected issues โ€” mold, bad wiring, plumbing surprises โ€” are the norm, not the exception.

Closing Costs (Purchase)

When you buy the property, you'll pay closing costs that typically run 1-2% of the purchase price. This includes title insurance, escrow fees, recording fees, attorney costs (in some states), and any loan origination fees if you're financing the purchase.

If you're using a hard money lender, origination fees alone can be 1-3 points (1-3% of the loan amount). Factor these in.

Holding Costs

Holding costs are the expenses you pay every month that you own the property. They add up fast, especially if your renovation runs behind schedule. Common holding costs include:

The average house flip takes 4-6 months from purchase to sale. Budget holding costs for at least 6 months. If you can shorten your renovation timeline, holding costs shrink and your profit grows.

Selling Costs

When you sell the finished flip, you'll pay:

A safe estimate is 7-8% of ARV for total selling costs. On a $300,000 sale, that's $21,000-$24,000.

What's a Good Profit on a House Flip?

The answer depends on the deal size and your risk tolerance, but here are industry benchmarks:

MetricTargetWhy It Matters
Net Profit$30,000 โ€“ $50,000+Minimum to justify the risk and effort
ROI (Return on Investment)15% โ€“ 25%+Measures efficiency of capital deployed
Profit Margin10% โ€“ 15% of ARVQuick gauge of deal quality
Annualized ROI40%+Accounts for how fast you turn capital

If your calculator shows a net profit below $20,000, proceed with extreme caution. One unexpected cost overrun โ€” a roof replacement, a foundation issue, a market dip โ€” can wipe out a thin margin entirely.

The 70% Rule: A Quick Sanity Check

Before you even open this calculator, experienced flippers use the 70% rule as a quick filter. It states that you should pay no more than 70% of the ARV minus repair costs for a flip property.

This rule automatically builds in margin for holding costs, selling costs, and profit. It's not perfect for every market (in hot markets, some flippers use 75-80%), but it's a reliable screening tool to quickly eliminate bad deals.

Why Deals Fail the 70% Rule

Common House Flipping Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)

  1. Skipping the inspection: Even for a gut renovation, you need to know about structural issues, environmental hazards (lead paint, asbestos), and code violations before you buy. Budget $400-$600 for a thorough inspection.
  2. Over-improving for the neighborhood: Don't put $80,000 worth of finishes in a $200,000 neighborhood. Your renovation level should match what comparable homes offer โ€” not exceed it.
  3. Ignoring holding costs: A 2-month delay in renovation doesn't just cost you contractor time. It costs loan interest, insurance, taxes, and utilities. Time is your enemy on a flip.
  4. Not having a contractor lined up: Your renovation timeline starts the day you close. If you don't have a vetted contractor ready to start, you're burning holding costs while searching.
  5. Forgetting about taxes: Short-term capital gains (flips held under 12 months) are taxed as ordinary income. That means 22-37% in federal taxes depending on your bracket, plus state taxes. Always factor taxes into your true profit calculation.

How to Find Deals That Actually Work

The math is simple. Finding properties where the math works โ€” that's the hard part. Here are the most reliable deal sources for house flippers:

House Flipping Calculator: Sample Deal Walkthrough

Let's run through a realistic example to show how the numbers come together:

ItemAmountNotes
Purchase Price$165,000Off-market deal from a wholesaler
Closing Costs (Buy)$3,3002% of purchase price
Rehab Costs$52,000Kitchen, 2 baths, flooring, paint, landscaping
Holding Costs (5 months)$9,500Hard money interest + taxes + insurance + utilities
ARV (Sale Price)$295,000Based on 4 comps within 0.3 miles
Selling Costs$20,6507% of ARV (agent commissions + closing)
Net Profit$44,550ROI: 19.4% on total investment

That's a solid deal. The flipper invested $229,800 total and walked away with $44,550 in profit โ€” a 19.4% return in 5 months. Annualized, that's nearly 47% ROI.

Should You Finance or Pay Cash?

Both approaches work, but they change your profit calculation significantly:

The right choice depends on your available capital and deal flow. Many successful flippers start with cash on their first deal, prove the concept, then scale using leverage on subsequent flips.

Ready to Build a Property Business That Scales?

The PropertyCEO Growth Playbook teaches you how to systematize deal analysis, marketing, and operations โ€” so you can go from one flip to a repeatable, profitable property business.

Get the Growth Playbook โ€” $197
One-time purchase ยท Instant access ยท No subscription

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