BRRRR Method Calculator in Google Sheets: Analyze Any Deal Before You Buy (2026)
The BRRRR strategy — Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat — is how real estate investors recycle capital to build a portfolio without running out of cash. But the math is unforgiving. Buy wrong, over-rehab, or miss the refinance numbers and you're stuck with capital tied up indefinitely. This guide shows you how to build a BRRRR calculator in Google Sheets that models every stage before you make an offer.
Table of Contents
- What Is the BRRRR Method (and When It Works)
- The Math That Makes or Breaks a BRRRR Deal
- Your 5-Tab BRRRR Calculator Structure
- Tab 1: Acquisition & Rehab
- Tab 2: Rental Analysis (Post-Rehab)
- Tab 3: Refinance Calculator
- Tab 4: Return Metrics Dashboard
- Key Formulas
- Worked Example: $180K Purchase in a Mid-Tier Market
- 5 BRRRR Mistakes That Kill Deals
What Is the BRRRR Method (and When It Works)
BRRRR is a real estate investment strategy popularized by BiggerPockets. The five stages:
- Buy — acquire a distressed property below market value (usually with cash or hard money)
- Rehab — renovate to increase the property's after-repair value (ARV)
- Rent — place a tenant to generate rental income and establish the property as a performing asset
- Refinance — do a cash-out refinance based on the new ARV, pulling out your invested capital
- Repeat — use the extracted cash to buy the next property and do it again
The goal is to end up with a cash-flowing rental property with little to none of your original capital still locked in it. Done right, you can theoretically build a portfolio indefinitely with a finite pool of capital — because you keep recycling the same dollars.
When BRRRR Works
- You can buy at 60–75% of ARV (after rehab value)
- The property cash flows after the refinance loan payment
- Your rehab estimate is accurate (the biggest variable)
- You have access to short-term capital (cash, hard money, HELOC) for the acquisition
- The rental market supports rents that cover the new mortgage at 75% LTV
When BRRRR Fails
- Rehab costs blow out beyond what the ARV can support
- The appraisal comes in below your projected ARV
- The refinanced loan has a payment that eats all cash flow
- You can't find a tenant at rent levels that justify the numbers
- Market conditions shift during a long rehab
This is why a detailed spreadsheet model — run before you make an offer — is not optional. It's the difference between a deliberate investment and an expensive experiment.
The Math That Makes or Breaks a BRRRR Deal
There are three mathematical gates every BRRRR deal must pass:
Gate 1: Can You Buy at the Right Price?
The Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO) formula tells you the most you should pay:
The 70% rule is conservative — it preserves enough equity for the refinance to pull your capital back out. Some investors use 75% in competitive markets, but that leaves less margin for error.
Gate 2: Does the Refinance Pull Your Capital Back?
After rehab, a lender will typically refinance at 70–75% LTV of the appraised ARV. Your goal is for that loan amount to equal or exceed your total cash invested:
Gate 3: Does It Cash Flow After Refi?
The refinanced loan has a new monthly payment. The property must still generate positive cash flow after that payment, plus vacancy, maintenance, property management, insurance, and taxes:
If your cash-out refi fully recycled your capital, your cash-on-cash return is technically infinite (no capital in). In practice, most deals leave some capital in — aim for 10–15%+ cash-on-cash on whatever remains.
Your 5-Tab BRRRR Calculator Structure
| Tab | What It Models | Key Output |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Inputs | All deal variables in one place | Single input source for all formulas |
| 2. Acquisition & Rehab | Total cash deployed before refinance | Total Cost Basis, MAO check |
| 3. Rental Analysis | Post-rehab income and expenses | Monthly NOI, gross yield |
| 4. Refinance | Refi loan amount, cash pulled out, equity left | Capital recycled %, cash left in deal |
| 5. Returns Dashboard | Full deal scorecard | CoC return, equity, deal verdict |
Track Your Rental Property Performance Year-Round
Our Google Sheets templates include income and expense trackers, ROI calculators, and financial dashboards built for landlords and real estate investors.
Browse Templates on Etsy →Tab 2: Acquisition & Rehab
This tab calculates everything you spend from the time you make an offer until the property is ready for a tenant.
| Input | Description | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase Price | What you paid for the property | 60–75% of ARV |
| Purchase Closing Costs | Title, attorney, transfer tax, lender fees | 1–3% of purchase |
| Hard Money Points & Fees | Origination points, underwriting, appraisal | 2–4% of loan amount |
| Rehab Budget | Total renovation cost (materials + labor) | Varies widely |
| Rehab Contingency | Buffer for overruns — never skip this | 10–20% of rehab budget |
| Carrying Costs | Hard money interest during rehab + holding costs | Rehab months × monthly interest |
| Utilities During Rehab | Electric, gas, water while vacant | $150–400/month |
| Insurance (Vacant) | Builders risk or vacant property insurance | Higher than standard |
The total of all these inputs is your Total Cash Invested (TCI) — the number your refinance needs to recover.
MAO Check Formula
Tab 3: Rental Analysis (Post-Rehab)
This tab models the property's income and expenses as a stabilized rental — after rehab is complete and the tenant is in place.
| Item | Monthly Input | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Monthly Rent | Market rent (use Zillow, Rentometer) | What tenants are paying nearby |
| Vacancy Rate | 8–10% of gross rent | Use 10% for conservative analysis |
| Property Management | 8–10% of collected rent | Skip if self-managing — but account for your time |
| Maintenance Reserve | 5–10% of gross rent | Older homes: use 10% |
| Property Tax | Annual tax ÷ 12 | Use post-rehab assessed value estimate |
| Insurance | Annual premium ÷ 12 | Landlord policy, not homeowner |
| HOA (if applicable) | Monthly dues | — |
| Utilities (if paid by owner) | Water, trash, etc. | Common in multifamily |
| Other Expenses | Lawn, snow, misc. | — |
NOI Before Debt Service
Track NOI before debt service separately. It's the property's income before financing costs — the metric that appraisers and lenders use to value the property for your refinance.
Tab 4: Refinance Calculator
This is the heart of the BRRRR model. It answers: after the refi, how much capital do I have back, and does the deal still cash flow?
Refinance Inputs
| Input | Description |
|---|---|
| After-Repair Value (ARV) | Appraised value post-rehab (estimate conservatively) |
| Lender LTV | 75% is typical for cash-out refi on investment property |
| New Interest Rate | Current 30-year investment property rate (check current rates) |
| Loan Term | 30 years (most common) or 20/15 |
| Refi Closing Costs | Typically 2–4% of loan amount |
| Months of Seasoning | How long before lender allows refi (typically 6–12 months) |
Refinance Output Calculations
PMT Formula in Google Sheets
2026 rate note: Investment property mortgage rates in 2026 are running 7–8% for 30-year conventional loans (roughly 0.5–0.75% above primary residence rates). At these levels, cash flow after a cash-out refi is tight in most markets. Model conservatively — use 7.5–8% in your calculator and verify with current lender quotes before making offers.
Tab 5: Returns Dashboard
The dashboard tab pulls everything together into a single deal scorecard:
| Metric | Your Deal | Good Threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase Price | [auto-fill from inputs] | ≤ MAO |
| Total Cash Invested | [calculated] | — |
| ARV | [input] | 25%+ above purchase |
| Refi Loan Amount | [calculated] | ≥ 90% of Cash Invested |
| Cash Left In Deal | [calculated] | Aim for $0–$10K |
| Capital Recycled % | [calculated] | 90%+ = great BRRRR |
| Monthly Cash Flow (post-refi) | [calculated] | ≥ $200/month |
| Cash-on-Cash Return | [calculated] | ≥ 10% on capital left in |
| Cap Rate (post-rehab) | [calculated] | ≥ 6% |
| Gross Rent Multiplier | [calculated] | ≤ 12× |
| Deal Verdict | [formula below] | ✅ Green Light |
Deal Verdict Formula
Key Formulas Summary
Worked Example: $180K Purchase in a Mid-Tier Market
Let's run a real deal through the calculator. A 3BR/1BA single-family home in a Midwest market.
Acquisition & Rehab
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase Price | $110,000 |
| Purchase Closing Costs (2%) | $2,200 |
| Hard Money Fees (3 points) | $3,300 |
| Rehab Budget | $42,000 |
| Rehab Contingency (15%) | $6,300 |
| Carrying Costs (6 months × $900) | $5,400 |
| Total Cash Invested | $169,200 |
Rental Analysis (Post-Rehab)
| Item | Monthly |
|---|---|
| Gross Rent | $1,650 |
| Vacancy (9%) | −$149 |
| Property Management (9%) | −$149 |
| Maintenance Reserve (8%) | −$132 |
| Property Tax | −$175 |
| Insurance | −$95 |
| Monthly NOI | $950 |
Refinance
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| ARV (appraised) | $235,000 |
| Refi LTV (75%) | 75% |
| Refi Loan Amount | $176,250 |
| Less: Hard Money Payoff | −$110,000 |
| Less: Refi Closing Costs (2.5%) | −$4,406 |
| Net Cash Out | $61,844 |
| Total Cash Invested | $169,200 |
| Cash Left In Deal | $107,356 |
| Capital Recycled | 37% — Not enough |
🔴 Deal Verdict: Reconsider — Capital Trapped
At $169,200 total invested and only $61,844 pulled out via refi, 63% of capital remains trapped in the deal. The purchase price needs to drop to ~$75,000–80,000 or the ARV needs to be higher for this to be a true BRRRR. The NOI is solid — this is a fine buy-and-hold, but it doesn't recycle capital efficiently enough for the BRRRR strategy.
The Adjusted Deal (Purchase at $78,000)
What if you negotiate the purchase to $78,000?
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total Cash Invested (revised) | $137,200 |
| Refi Loan Amount (same ARV) | $176,250 |
| Net Cash Out | $84,844 |
| Cash Left In Deal | $52,356 |
| Capital Recycled | 62% — Better |
| Monthly Cash Flow After Refi | $950 − $1,183 = −$233 |
🔴 Still Fails Gate 3: Negative Cash Flow After Refi
At 7.5% on $176,250, the monthly payment is ~$1,232. That's $282 more than the $950 monthly NOI. The property cannot support the refinance debt at current rates. This illustrates the key challenge with BRRRR in 2026 — even deals with good equity struggle to cash flow after a refi at 7–8% rates. You need to find higher-rent markets, lower purchase prices, or accept partial capital recycling.
The 2026 reality check: High interest rates compress BRRRR returns significantly. The strategy works best when you can find deeply discounted properties (50–60% of ARV) in markets with strong rent-to-price ratios, or when you have access to seller financing and other creative structures that bypass conventional refi rates. Your spreadsheet will tell you fast if a deal has a chance — run the numbers before you get emotionally attached to a property.
5 BRRRR Mistakes That Kill Deals
1. Inflating the ARV
ARV is the entire foundation of the BRRRR model. If your ARV is wrong, every other number is wrong. Get three comps from an investor-friendly agent or appraiser before you make an offer. Use the lower end of your comp range — not the higher. A $15,000 ARV overestimate can trap $11,000+ of capital in the deal (at 75% LTV).
2. Underestimating Rehab Costs
Scope creep is the #1 budget killer in rental rehabs. Foundation issues, knob-and-tube wiring, mold behind walls, plumbing cast iron that's 80 years old — these things don't show up in casual walkthroughs. Always include a 15–20% contingency in your model, and get a detailed scope of work from your contractor before closing. "About $30K" is not a rehab budget — a line-item estimate is.
3. Ignoring the Seasoning Period
Most conventional lenders require 6–12 months of title seasoning before allowing a cash-out refinance on investment property. Some require the property to be rented and showing income for 2–3 months. This means your capital is locked up for 6–12 months minimum. Model carrying costs (hard money interest or opportunity cost) for the full seasoning period — not just the rehab phase.
4. Using the Appraised Value Before Refi Exists
Your ARV projection is just that — a projection. The actual refi appraisal may come in lower, especially if the appraiser uses distressed comps or the market shifted during your rehab. Always model a downside scenario: what happens if the ARV comes in 10% below your projection? If that scenario breaks the deal, you're operating without a safety margin.
5. Forgetting Post-Refi Cash Flow Gate
Many BRRRR investors obsess over capital recycling and forget to ask: does this property still cash flow after the new mortgage payment? A property that recycles 95% of your capital is worthless if the remaining $10K earns you −$200/month. Both gates — capital recycling AND post-refi cash flow — must pass for a deal to qualify as a true BRRRR.
Track Your Rental Income & Expenses After You Buy
Once you've closed your BRRRR deal, you need a system to track rent, expenses, and cash flow. Our Freelancer Financial Dashboard is built for income tracking, expense categorization, and financial visibility — on Etsy for instant download.
Get the Template on Etsy →Setting Up Your BRRRR Tracker for Multiple Deals
Once you've done one BRRRR deal, the model becomes reusable. Add a "Deal Comparison" tab that lists all your deals with key metrics side by side — ARV, capital recycled, cash-on-cash return, monthly cash flow. This lets you see at a glance which deals performed and which ones trapped capital, and it informs your criteria for the next acquisition.
The investors who scale BRRRR portfolios successfully aren't necessarily smarter — they're more systematic. They run every deal through the same model, they have consistent criteria, and they walk away from deals that don't clear all three gates. Your Google Sheets calculator is what makes that discipline automatic.
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