What Is a Cap Rate?
A capitalization rate — or "cap rate" — is the ratio of a property's net operating income (NOI) to its purchase price or current market value. It's expressed as a percentage and represents the unleveraged annual return you would earn if you bought the property with all cash.
Cap rates are the universal language of commercial real estate pricing. When someone says a property is "trading at a 6 cap," they mean the annual NOI equals 6% of the purchase price. It's a quick, standardized way to compare properties regardless of size, location, or property type.
How to Calculate a Cap Rate
Cap Rate Formula
Cap Rate = Net Operating Income / Purchase Price
Example: A property generates $90,000 in annual NOI and is listed at $1,500,000.
$90,000 / $1,500,000 = 6.0% Cap Rate
You can also work the formula in reverse. If you know the NOI and the market cap rate for similar properties, you can estimate value: Property Value = NOI / Cap Rate. This is how appraisers and brokers determine what a property is worth based on its income stream.
What Is a "Good" Cap Rate?
There's no single answer — it depends on the property type, location, tenant quality, lease term, and your investment goals. Generally, cap rates reflect the risk-return tradeoff:
Credit tenants (Walgreens, Chick-fil-A), long lease terms, prime locations. Ideal for capital preservation.
Strong regional tenants, mid-term leases, good secondary markets. The sweet spot for many investors.
Shorter lease terms, local tenants, tertiary markets, or value-add situations. More management and re-tenanting risk.
A lower cap rate means you're paying more per dollar of income — but you're typically getting a safer, more predictable income stream. A higher cap rate offers more yield but comes with more risk. Neither is inherently better; it depends on your investment strategy.
Cap Rate vs. Cash-on-Cash Return
Cap rate and cash-on-cash return are related but measure different things. Understanding both is essential for evaluating deals properly.
Cap Rate
Measures the property's return as if purchased with all cash. Ignores financing entirely. Useful for comparing properties on an apples-to-apples basis regardless of how they're financed.
Cash-on-Cash Return
Measures the annual cash flow relative to the actual cash you invested (your down payment plus closing costs). Accounts for leverage. A 6% cap rate property financed with a loan might yield 8-10% cash-on-cash.
Use cap rate to compare and price properties. Use cash-on-cash return to evaluate how a specific deal performs relative to the capital you're actually deploying. Both metrics matter, and savvy investors look at each when analyzing an opportunity.
Central Florida Cap Rate Ranges
Cap rates in Central Florida vary by property type, tenant strength, and submarket. Here's a general overview of where the market sits for common commercial property types in the Orlando and Space Coast regions:
These are general ranges and will shift based on specific lease terms, location within the metro, and current market conditions. Central Florida has seen moderate cap rate compression over the past several years as demand from out-of-state investors continues to drive pricing.
Need Help Analyzing a Deal?
MaxLife Development can help you evaluate cap rates, run the numbers, and determine whether a property fits your investment goals. Central Florida is our market.
Contact Us