Methodology · Cap Rate · v1.0 · 2026-05-25

How HypeCity computes cap rate — and when to trust it.

Capitalization rate is one of real estate's most-cited metrics and one of its most misunderstood. Here is how HypeCity computes it from public sources, what assumptions sit inside the calculation, and how the confidence engine determines whether the result is reliable enough to act on.

On this page
§1 — What cap rate measures

Cap rate is a yield metric — not a total return metric.

Capitalization rate (cap rate) measures the unlevered income yield of a real estate asset: the ratio of net operating income to asset value, expressed as a percentage. It is a pre-financing metric — it does not incorporate mortgage payments, tax benefits of leverage, or appreciation. An investor using a mortgage will have a different cash-on-cash return than the cap rate suggests; an all-cash buyer's unlevered return tracks directly to the cap rate.

Cap rate is most useful for three purposes:

Cap rate does not tell you what the investment will return. It tells you the income yield at a point in time, given the inputs used to estimate NOI and value. If either input is wrong — stale rental data, off-market comp, unusual operating cost assumptions — the cap rate number is wrong too. This is precisely why HypeCity wraps every cap rate figure in confidence metadata.
§2 — Net operating income

The NOI estimate: what goes in, what stays out.

Net operating income (NOI) is the numerator in the cap rate calculation. It represents the income the property generates after operating expenses, before financing costs and income taxes. For a residential rental property, the computation moves from gross rental income down through vacancies and operating expenses to arrive at NOI.

NOI calculation — conceptual structure
Gross Potential Rent (GPR)
- Vacancy and credit loss allowance
= Effective Gross Income (EGI)
- Operating expenses (taxes, insurance, maintenance, management)
= Net Operating Income (NOI)
Note: financing costs (mortgage payments, interest) are excluded. NOI is a pre-financing, pre-income-tax figure.

Gross potential rent

HypeCity estimates gross potential rent from aggregated rental market data sourced from RentCafe and Rentometer, cross-referenced against public listing data where available. The estimate is based on the neighborhood median rent for comparable units — comparable being defined by bedroom count and approximate square footage, where these attributes are available from the listing or public records data.

The gross potential rent estimate is explicitly a neighborhood-level figure, not a property-specific appraisal. The actual rent achievable for a specific unit may differ from the neighborhood median depending on the unit's condition, amenities, and specific location within the neighborhood. HypeCity surfaces this caveat alongside the cap rate figure.

Vacancy and credit loss

A vacancy and credit loss allowance is applied to convert gross potential rent to effective gross income. The allowance is derived from neighborhood-level vacancy trend data sourced from US Census Bureau vacancy statistics (American Housing Survey) and corroborated against Redfin days-on-market data as a proxy for market tightness. A tight market with low DOM and falling vacancy rates receives a lower vacancy allowance than a softer market.

Operating expenses

Operating expenses are estimated from a combination of public data sources:

HOA fees, where present, are added to operating expenses if they are disclosed in the listing data. HOA fees are a material operating cost in condominium and planned-unit-development properties; their omission would overstate NOI meaningfully.

§3 — Property value

Which price goes in the denominator?

Cap rate equals NOI divided by property value. The choice of which value to use in the denominator materially affects the result, and different practitioners use different conventions. HypeCity's approach is transparent about this choice:

Primary: list price
When the listing price is available
When a listing price is provided by the user or available from the listing data, HypeCity uses the list price as the denominator for the primary cap rate calculation. This reflects the acquisition cost the buyer would pay at current ask, which is the most directly decision-relevant figure for an investor evaluating whether to pursue the property. If the listing is priced significantly above the neighborhood median, this produces a lower cap rate than a buyer negotiating to median would achieve. The Investment Signal system flags this situation explicitly — it is part of the "Fits at Right Price" signal logic.
Secondary: neighborhood median
When comparing to market context
HypeCity also computes a neighborhood-median-implied cap rate using the neighborhood median price from Redfin public data and Zillow ZHVI as the denominator. This figure represents what a buyer paying the neighborhood median would achieve, and is useful for understanding whether the listing is priced above or below market on an income basis. The two figures — list-price cap rate and median-implied cap rate — are displayed side by side when both are available and when the gap between them is meaningful.
§4 — The formula

The calculation in plain language.

The cap rate calculation, with all inputs explained:

Cap rate formula
Cap Rate = NOI / Current Property Value
Where NOI = Effective Gross Income - Operating Expenses
And: Effective Gross Income = Gross Potential Rent × (1 - Vacancy Rate)
Expressed as a percentage. Higher cap rate = higher unlevered income yield at the given price.

The formula itself is standard and not proprietary. What differs between providers is the quality and sourcing of the inputs. HypeCity uses publicly available, citable sources for each input — rental market data from RentCafe and Rentometer, property value data from Redfin and Zillow public downloads, tax data from public county records, insurance cost data adjusted for FEMA climate classifications. The sources are named, not obscured.

§5 — What is inside the estimate

The assumptions HypeCity makes and discloses.

Every cap rate estimate rests on assumptions. HypeCity makes those assumptions explicit rather than presenting the output as a precise calculation. The key assumptions are:

Cap rate is an estimate, not an appraisal. The figure HypeCity produces is an automated estimate derived from public data. It is not a formal appraisal, not a broker's opinion of value, and not a guarantee of achievable income. It is a first-look screening tool. Before committing capital, verify rental income, operating costs, and property condition with a licensed broker and independent property inspection.
§6 — Confidence factors

When is a cap rate figure reliable enough to act on?

The confidence engine evaluates four dimensions of data quality for the cap rate calculation specifically. A cap rate figure can look precise while actually being built on thin or stale inputs. The confidence metadata tells you how much to trust it.

High confidence
Dense rental data, recent price comps, current property tax records, fresh vacancy data. The NOI estimate and the value denominator are both well-supported. The cap rate figure is credible for screening purposes and directionally reliable. Normal due-diligence caveats apply but the order of magnitude is trustworthy.
Medium confidence
One or more inputs are moderately stale or have thin observation counts. Often this means the rental data is current but the price comps are 60-90 days old, or the vacancy rate estimate is based on a modest transaction sample. The cap rate is directionally useful but should be treated as a range rather than a point estimate. A broker's current comp set would sharpen it.
Low confidence
Critical inputs are stale, missing, or based on very thin data. The cap rate figure carries a Low Confidence flag in the UI. The analysis is still surfaced — HypeCity shows the available inputs and the direction of the estimate — but the specific percentage should not be used as a basis for underwriting decisions without independent verification.

The confidence assessment for cap rate draws on the same four pillars as the general confidence engine: data freshness, sample size, outlier handling, and schema completeness. For cap rate specifically, the most binding constraints are typically:

§7 — Cap rate and persona goals

The same cap rate means different things to different personas.

Cap rate is primarily relevant to income-focused personas. How much it matters — and what threshold is meaningful — differs significantly across the six personas:

Persona Cap rate relevance Key consideration
Yield Hunter Very high — central to the thesis Compared directly against mortgage cost. If cap rate is below the blended cost of debt, the property is negatively leveraged. The Yield Hunter's red-flag thresholds are calibrated against prevailing mortgage rates at the time of analysis.
Flipper Low — exit timeline is too short for income to matter A Flipper's hold period is rarely long enough for NOI to drive the return. Cap rate appears in the Flipper analysis as context but is not a material scoring input for this persona.
Lifestyle Buyer Very low — not the investment thesis Cap rate is displayed for completeness but excluded from the persona's scoring weights. This buyer is not purchasing for income.
Family / Primary Low — return is not the primary driver Cap rate is relevant to the Family persona only as a background check on whether the property is grossly mispriced on an income basis. It does not drive the verdict.
FIRE / Geo-Arb Moderate — relevant if rental income offsets living costs For a FIRE buyer who plans to rent out part of a property, cap rate is a meaningful input to the overall cost-of-living calculation. For a pure owner-occupier, it matters less.
Expat / Cross-Border Moderate — relevant to financing and tax structuring Cross-border buyers often face different tax treatment on rental income, which affects the effective after-tax yield. The pre-tax cap rate is displayed; the after-tax calculation requires jurisdiction-specific advice.

For personas where cap rate is material, the Investment Signal system incorporates it into the scoring in conjunction with mortgage rate context. A cap rate that looked strong in a low-interest-rate environment may generate neutral or negative leverage in a higher-rate environment. HypeCity's cap rate display includes a contextual note on current conventional mortgage rate benchmarks where available from public Federal Reserve and Freddie Mac data, so the yield-versus-cost-of-debt comparison is visible without requiring the user to do additional math.

§8 — Data sources

Every input, named and cited.

HypeCity does not obscure where the numbers come from. Every input to the cap rate calculation is sourced from a public dataset:

§9 — Try it

See a cap rate on a real listing.

Run a listing through HypeCity and see the cap rate estimate alongside its confidence metadata — which sources powered the calculation, how fresh the inputs are, and what the confidence interval means for your decision.

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Methodology
Investment Signal methodology →
How the full pipeline converts cap rate and 18 other variables into a single Investment Signal label.
Methodology
Confidence engine methodology →
The four pillars — freshness, sample size, outlier handling, schema completeness — that determine how much to trust any figure.
Methodology
Persona fit methodology →
How the 6 investor personas weight cap rate differently — and when it drives the verdict versus being background context.
Not investment advice. Cap rate figures produced by HypeCity are automated estimates derived from public data. They are not formal appraisals, broker opinions of value, or guarantees of achievable income. They are research signals — a starting point for due diligence, not a substitute for it. Consult a licensed real-estate broker and qualified financial advisor before acting on any analysis. Property-specific conditions, local market nuances, and individual tax situations are not captured in automated estimates and must be independently verified.
Research and information only — not investment, legal, or tax advice. See full disclaimer →