Resources & Tools

CJ Yield & Acquisition Cost Calculator

Understand true yield after costs, not just headline pricing.

Disclaimer. This tool provides an indicative yield calculation based on user inputs. It does not constitute valuation advice. Actual yield and value depend on asset-specific factors and market evidence.

Calculation mode

Price + rent → yields

Step 1

Asset type

Step 2

Core inputs

Purchase price

£

Annual gross rent

£

About this tool

What the Yield & Acquisition Cost calculates

Yield is the single most-quoted number in UK commercial property — and the most misused. The headline 'gross yield' a broker quotes is rarely the yield an investor actually receives, because it ignores SDLT, agent and legal fees, voids and ongoing non-recoverable costs.

This calculator returns gross yield, net yield and the Net Initial Yield (NIY) used by RICS valuers and institutional investors — the rent that actually reaches the landlord, divided by the total capital outlay including purchaser's costs.

It also runs in reverse: enter the target NIY and the calculator solves for the price an investor can pay to achieve it.

Methodology

How it works

Gross yield

Gross yield is annual contracted rent divided by the purchase price. It is the broker's headline number and a useful sanity check, but it ignores both acquisition costs and ongoing income leakage.

Net yield

Net yield deducts running costs that the landlord can't recover from the tenant — typical non-recoverables, void allowance, management — from the rent before dividing by the purchase price.

Net Initial Yield (NIY)

NIY is the institutional benchmark. It takes net rent on day one and divides it by total capital outlay — purchase price plus SDLT, agent and legal fees, building survey and due diligence. NIY is what a valuer will use to triangulate price evidence, so it is the yield to negotiate against.

Reverse-yield mode

Enter a target NIY and the calculator works backwards from the net rent and acquisition-cost assumptions to the bid price. Useful for screening opportunities and for setting reserve prices on disposals.

Assumptions & limitations

Key assumptions

  • SDLT is calculated on the price entered using current bands — change the rate manually if a relief or election applies.
  • Purchaser's costs default to a typical institutional bundle (agent, legal, survey); adjust per deal.
  • Voids and management are expressed as % of rent — refine to a £ figure where the asset is unusual.
  • Yields are produced on day-one income only. Rental growth, reversionary income and capex are modelled in the Property Investment Value calculator.

When you'd use it

Typical scenarios

Screening an off-market opportunity

Drop in price and rent, layer the standard cost bundle, and you have an institutional NIY in under a minute.

Setting a reserve on a disposal

Use reverse mode to translate the target NIY a buyer pool will accept into the price you should release the asset at.

Pricing a loan against the asset

Lenders price off NIY net of costs. Sense-check the borrower's pack against this calculator before sending out terms.

FAQ

Yield & Acquisition Cost — frequently asked

What is Net Initial Yield (NIY)?

NIY is the annual net rent receivable on day one divided by the gross price of the property, including purchaser's costs. It is the institutional benchmark used by RICS valuers and is the most defensible yield figure to negotiate against.

Why is NIY lower than gross yield?

Because the denominator is larger (price plus SDLT, legal and agent fees) and the numerator is smaller (rent net of voids, management and non-recoverables). The gap is often 80–150 bps on a typical commercial asset.

What purchaser's costs should I assume?

On standard commercial deals, a 6.8%–7.0% round-trip is the long-running market shorthand once SDLT, agent (1%), legal (0.5%) and building survey are aggregated. Use the explicit fields to tailor it to your deal.

Does the calculator handle reverse yields?

Yes. Enter the target NIY and the calculator solves for the price you can pay to hit it, using the same SDLT and cost assumptions.

What's the difference between NIY and equivalent yield?

NIY is day-one income. Equivalent yield is the single discount rate that reconciles current rent with reversionary ERV over the lease term. Use NIY for screening and price evidence; use equivalent yield (and Term & Reversion) when the property has a reversion to model — that lives in the Property Investment Value calculator.