What is a good rental yield? Gross vs net, and the numbers that matter
"What's the yield?" is the first question any experienced landlord asks about a property. Yield is the headline measure of how well a rental earns relative to its price — but the single word hides two very different numbers, and knowing which one you're looking at is the difference between a good decision and an expensive one.
Gross yield: the quick screen
Gross yield is the simplest measure: annual rent divided by the property price, as a percentage.
Gross yield = (annual rent ÷ property price) × 100
A £250,000 flat let at £1,200 a month earns £14,400 a year, so its gross yield is 5.8%. It's a useful first filter for comparing properties, but it ignores every cost of actually being a landlord — so it always flatters the deal.
Net yield: the honest number
Net yield subtracts the running costs before dividing by the price:
Net yield = ((annual rent − running costs) ÷ property price) × 100
Running costs include letting and management fees, maintenance, insurance, and an allowance for void periods when the property sits empty. On that same flat, costs of around £3,000 a year bring the net yield down to roughly 4.6%. Net yield is the figure to judge a property on, because it reflects what you actually keep before mortgage and tax.
So what's a good yield?
As a rough guide for the UK:
- Below 4% — you're relying on capital growth rather than income.
- 5–6% — typical for a solid buy-to-let.
- 7% and above — strong, and more common in the North of England than in London and the South East, where high prices push yields down.
There's a trade-off: high-yield areas often have slower price growth, while low-yield areas have historically delivered more capital appreciation. Neither is automatically "better" — it depends on whether you're investing for monthly income or long-term growth.
Why cashflow and ROI matter more
Yield measures the property; it doesn't tell you how your money is doing. Because most buy-to-lets are mortgaged, the number that often matters most is cash-on-cash return — your annual profit after the mortgage, divided by the actual cash you invested (deposit plus purchase costs). A modest 5% yield can still produce a healthy return on the cash you put in, thanks to leverage.
Run the numbers
Buy-to-Let Yield Calculator
Enter price, rent, deposit and costs to see gross and net yield, monthly cashflow, annual profit and cash-on-cash ROI in one place.
Open the calculator →Don't forget tax
Yield and cashflow figures are usually quoted before tax. Individual landlords can no longer deduct mortgage interest as an expense (Section 24) and instead receive a 20% tax credit, which can turn an apparently profitable higher-rate let into a thin one. Many investors now buy through a limited company, where profit is taxed via Corporation Tax instead. It's worth modelling your own position with an accountant.
Common mistakes
Judging a property on gross yield alone. It ignores every cost — always look at net yield and monthly cashflow.
Underestimating voids and maintenance. Budget for at least a few weeks empty a year and ongoing repairs; ignoring them makes every deal look better than it is.
Chasing yield into the wrong area. A high headline yield in a low-demand location can mean long voids and difficult tenants that wipe out the paper return.