๐Ÿ“… March 23, 2026 ยท โฑ 16 min read ยท ๐Ÿ  Real Estate

House Hacking Calculator in Google Sheets: Analyze Any Live-In Rental Deal Before You Buy (2026)

House hacking โ€” buying a multi-unit property or home with rentable rooms, living in one unit, and using tenant rent to offset your mortgage โ€” is one of the most powerful wealth-building strategies available to first-time buyers. But the math has to work. Build this Google Sheets calculator before you make an offer on anything.

3.5%
Minimum FHA down payment (owner-occupied)
$0
True housing cost when rent covers mortgage
5โ€“7%
Historical annual appreciation in many US markets

In This Guide

  1. What Is House Hacking (and Why It Works)
  2. Types of House Hacks: Which One Are You Analyzing?
  3. The 7 Numbers Every House Hack Deal Must Show
  4. Building the House Hack Calculator in Google Sheets
  5. Tab 1: Property & Acquisition Inputs
  6. Tab 2: Rental Income
  7. Tab 3: Monthly Expenses
  8. Tab 4: Analysis Dashboard
  9. Phase 2: After You Move Out
  10. 5-Year Net Worth Impact
  11. FHA vs. Conventional: Which Loan Wins?
  12. Red Flags in the Numbers

What Is House Hacking (and Why It Works)

The concept is simple: you buy a property with the intent to both live in it and generate rental income from it. The rental income offsets โ€” or eliminates โ€” your housing cost. Meanwhile, you build equity, claim owner-occupied financing (lower rates, lower down payments), and potentially accelerate your path to financial independence.

The math is compelling because housing is most people's largest monthly expense. If you can reduce it to $200/month or zero, you free up thousands of dollars annually that would otherwise disappear into a landlord's pocket.

After 1โ€“2 years (the typical owner-occupant requirement), you can move out and convert the entire property to a full rental โ€” suddenly you have positive cash flow and an appreciating asset, built with a down payment far smaller than a traditional investment property purchase would require.

๐Ÿ’ก Owner-Occupant Advantage: FHA loans require only 3.5% down and allow you to use projected rental income to qualify. Conventional loans start at 5% down for owner-occupied 2-4 unit properties. An investor buying the same property as a pure investment would need 20-25% down.

Types of House Hacks: Which One Are You Analyzing?

The right calculator structure depends on what you're buying. The main models are:

1. Multi-Unit (Duplex / Triplex / Fourplex)

You live in one unit, rent the others. Clean separation. Each unit is a discrete income source. Best for pure cash flow analysis. FHA financing works up to 4 units.

2. Single-Family with Rentable Rooms

You rent individual bedrooms in a home where you also live. Higher per-unit income than duplex in many markets. Requires more landlord involvement (shared common areas). Great in high-rent cities where $800/room ร— 3 rooms = $2,400/month.

3. ADU / Basement / Garage Conversion

Primary home plus an accessory dwelling unit (in-law suite, basement apartment, converted garage). Combines privacy of single-family living with rental income. Income potential typically lower than multi-unit but lower friction.

4. Short-Term Rental Rooms (Airbnb)

Renting spare rooms on Airbnb rather than long-term leases. Higher potential income, higher variability and management burden. Requires a separate Airbnb tracker for the income side.

Your calculator needs to accommodate your specific model. We'll build it flexibly enough to handle any version.

The 7 Numbers Every House Hack Deal Must Show

Before building anything, know what you're solving for:

#MetricWhat It Tells You
1True Housing Cost (Phase 1)Your actual monthly cost while living there after rent income
2Monthly Cash Flow (Phase 2)Monthly profit when fully rented after you move out
3Break-Even RentMinimum total rent needed to cover all expenses
4Cash-on-Cash ReturnAnnual cash flow รท total cash invested
5Cap RateNOI รท property value (ignores financing)
6Equity After 5 YearsDown payment + principal paydown + appreciation
7Total Return (Rent Savings + Equity + Cash Flow)The full wealth creation picture

Most house hack calculators online only show one or two of these. Your spreadsheet will show all seven โ€” and update them automatically as you adjust your assumptions.

Building the House Hack Calculator in Google Sheets

Four tabs, each feeding into the next. Open a new Google Sheet and create these tabs before you start building formulas.

Tab 1: Property & Acquisition Inputs

Every assumption flows from here. Use light yellow cells for all inputs so you can quickly see what's a formula vs. what you're supposed to change.

InputExampleNotes
Purchase Price$385,000Negotiated contract price
Down Payment %3.5%3.5% for FHA; 5-20% for conventional
Down Payment $=Price * DownPctAuto-calculated
Loan Amount=Price - DownPaymentAuto-calculated
Interest Rate6.75%Current rate for loan type
Loan Term (years)30Or 15 for aggressive paydown
Loan TypeFHAFor reference / notes
Closing Costs$9,500Typically 2-5% of purchase price
Rehab / Repairs$5,000Estimate needed before move-in
Reserves (3 months expenses)$6,000Emergency cash set aside
Total Cash Needed=DownPayment + Closing + Rehab + ReservesYour actual out-of-pocket
Property TypeDuplexDuplex / Triplex / 4-Plex / SFR
Number of Units (rental)1Units rented while you live there
Annual Appreciation Rate4%Conservative estimate for your market

Mortgage Payment Formula

Monthly P&I Payment

=PMT(InterestRate/12, LoanTerm*12, -LoanAmount)

Example: =PMT(0.0675/12, 360, -371225) โ†’ $2,407/month

This is principal and interest only. Add taxes, insurance, and PMI separately in the Expenses tab.

Tab 2: Rental Income

This tab has two modes: Phase 1 (you're living there, some units rented) and Phase 2 (you've moved out, everything is rented). Toggle between them with a single cell dropdown.

Phase 1: House Hacking Income

Unit / RoomTenant StatusMonthly RentLease EndSecurity Deposit
Unit 1 (You)Owner$0โ€”โ€”
Unit 2Rented$1,450Jan 2027$1,450
Unit 3 (if applicable)Vacant$0โ€”โ€”

Below the unit table, add summary rows:

Phase 2: Full Rental Mode (After You Move Out)

Add a separate section or use the same table with your unit now showing a market rent estimate. When you move out, your unit becomes income-generating at whatever rent the market will bear.

UnitMarket RentVacancy %Effective Monthly Income
Unit 1 (your former unit)$1,4005%=1400*(1-0.05)
Unit 2$1,4505%=1450*(1-0.05)
Total Phase 2 Incomeโ€”=SUM(EffectiveIncome)

Tab 3: Monthly Expenses

Expenses are what kills house hack deals that look good on paper. Be conservative. Include everything.

ExpenseMonthly AmountNotes
Mortgage P&I$2,407From PMT formula (Tab 1)
Property Tax$400Annual tax รท 12
Homeowner's Insurance$150Landlord policy, not standard homeowner
PMI (if applicable)$180FHA: 0.55-1.05% annually; drops after 11 years
Water / Sewer$80If owner-paid
Trash$30If owner-paid
Lawn / Snow Removal$60Seasonal average
Maintenance Reserve$193Use 0.5-1% of purchase price per year รท 12
CapEx Reserve$193Roof, HVAC, appliances โ€” budget separately from maintenance
Property Management$0 (self-managed)Budget 8-10% if you plan to hire out
Misc / Other$50Locks, supplies, minor repairs
Total Monthly Expenses=SUM(above)โ€”

โš ๏ธ The Two Expenses Most Spreadsheets Skip

Maintenance reserve and CapEx reserve are the most commonly ignored line items. They don't show up as a regular bill, so people exclude them. Then the furnace dies and suddenly the deal's math looks terrible. Budget for both, every month, from day one.

Tab 4: Analysis Dashboard

This is the one page you show anyone when analyzing a deal. All the inputs from the other tabs feed here. Use conditional formatting to color-code whether each metric passes your investment criteria.

Phase 1: Your True Housing Cost

True Monthly Housing Cost (While Living There)

True Housing Cost = Total Monthly Expenses โˆ’ Phase 1 Rental Income

Example:
Total Expenses:   $3,743/month
Phase 1 Income:  โˆ’$1,378/month (Unit 2 at $1,450 ร— 95% occupancy)
True Housing Cost: $2,365/month

Compare this to what you'd pay to rent a comparable unit in the same market. If renting a comparable unit costs $2,200/month, you're only saving $165/month in Phase 1 โ€” but you're building equity every month and setting up Phase 2.

The "true housing cost" should show green if it's below market rent for comparable housing. If it's already positive cash flow in Phase 1 (your tenant income exceeds all expenses), that's exceptional โ€” flag it with a big green cell.

Phase 2: Full Rental Cash Flow

Monthly Cash Flow (After Moving Out)

Monthly Cash Flow = Phase 2 Total Income โˆ’ Total Monthly Expenses

Example:
Phase 2 Income:   $2,728/month ($1,330 + $1,378)
Total Expenses:  โˆ’$3,743/month
Monthly Cash Flow: โˆ’$1,015/month โ† This deal loses money fully rented!

Better scenario (market rents cover expenses):
Phase 2 Income:   $3,950/month
Total Expenses:  โˆ’$3,743/month
Monthly Cash Flow: +$207/month โ† Positive!

Note: Many house hack deals run at slightly negative cash flow in Phase 2 but still make sense because of the equity build and the Phase 1 savings. Your calculator should show both clearly so you make that trade-off intentionally.

Key Ratios

MetricFormulaGood Threshold
Cash-on-Cash Return (Phase 2)=(MonthlyCashFlow*12) / TotalCashInvestedโ‰ฅ 6% (after all expenses)
Cap Rate=AnnualNOI / PurchasePriceโ‰ฅ 5% in most markets
Gross Rent Multiplier=PurchasePrice / (AnnualGrossRent)โ‰ค 15 in most markets
Break-Even Rent=TotalExpenses / Unitsโ‰ค 90% of market rent
Debt Service Coverage Ratio=NetOperatingIncome / AnnualDebtServiceโ‰ฅ 1.0 (lender threshold)

Net Operating Income (NOI) Formula

NOI Calculation

NOI = Effective Gross Income โˆ’ Operating Expenses
     (Operating expenses exclude mortgage P&I โ€” NOI is financing-agnostic)

Monthly NOI = Phase 2 Income โˆ’ (Total Expenses โˆ’ Mortgage P&I โˆ’ PMI)
Annual NOI = Monthly NOI ร— 12

Phase 2: After You Move Out

The Phase 2 transition is when house hacking pays off most powerfully. At this stage you've met your owner-occupancy requirement (typically 12 months for FHA, though lenders vary), and you can move out and rent your unit to market-rate tenants.

Your calculator should include a Phase 2 toggle or section that shows what changes:

Add a side-by-side comparison column in your dashboard: Phase 1 numbers vs. Phase 2 numbers. The delta shows the financial incentive to eventually move out and scale.

5-Year Net Worth Impact

The most powerful case for house hacking isn't monthly cash flow โ€” it's total wealth creation over 5 years. This section of your calculator makes that visible.

Wealth ComponentYear 1Year 3Year 5
Down Payment (initial equity)$13,475$13,475$13,475
Principal Paydown$3,847$12,180$21,040
Appreciation (4% annually)$15,400$48,680$86,280
Phase 1 Housing Savings$1,980$5,940$9,900
Phase 2 Cumulative Cash Flow$0$2,484$7,452
Total Net Worth Created$34,702$82,759$138,147

Build this as a table in your dashboard using projections. Key formulas:

Appreciation at Year N

=PurchasePrice * ((1 + AnnualAppreciationRate)^N - 1)

Principal Paydown at Year N

=CUMPRINC(InterestRate/12, LoanTermMonths, LoanAmount, 1, N*12, 0)

CUMPRINC returns the cumulative principal paid over a range of payments โ€” one of Google Sheets' most useful but underused financial functions.

FHA vs. Conventional: Which Loan Wins?

Add a comparison section or a separate sheet that shows FHA vs. conventional side by side for the same property. The inputs are the same; only the down payment percentage, rate, and PMI assumptions change.

MetricFHA 3.5% DownConventional 5% DownConventional 10% Down
Down Payment$13,475$19,250$38,500
Loan Amount$385,025*$365,750$346,500
Monthly P&I$2,497$2,372$2,247
Monthly MIP / PMI$177$152$0 (if 20%+)
Total Monthly PITI$3,224$3,074$2,797
Cash Needed at Close~$28,000~$34,000~$53,000
Phase 1 True Housing Cost$1,846$1,696$1,419

*FHA includes 1.75% upfront MIP rolled into loan. Example rates illustrative.

๐Ÿ’ก FHA vs. Conventional Takeaway: FHA's lower down payment means less cash out of pocket and a higher cash-on-cash return percentage on that cash (even if absolute cash flow is slightly lower due to MIP). If you're cash-constrained, FHA wins on entry. If you have more cash available, conventional at 10-20% down produces better monthly numbers. The calculator makes this comparison automatic.

Red Flags in the Numbers

Build these as conditional formatting rules in your dashboard. Red = danger, yellow = watch, green = good.

๐Ÿ”ด Hard No's

๐ŸŸก Watch These

๐ŸŸข Strong Deal Signals

๐Ÿ“Š Sample Deal Verdict

Property: $385K duplex, FHA 3.5% down, $1,450/month rent from Unit 2

Phase 1 True Housing Cost: $1,846/month vs. $2,300/month to rent comparable unit

Phase 1 Monthly Savings vs. Renting: $454/month ($5,448/year)

Phase 2 Cash Flow (both units rented): +$155/month with property management

5-Year Estimated Net Worth Created: $138,000+

Verdict: Strong house hack candidate. Phase 1 cuts housing cost by 20%. Phase 2 cash flows positive. Deal qualifies.

๐Ÿ“Š Already Own a Rental Property?

Our Rental Property Tracker on Etsy handles income, expenses, maintenance, and depreciation schedules โ€” everything you need to manage a live rental portfolio.

Browse Templates on Etsy โ†’

Building the Tracker: Quick-Start Checklist

House Hack Calculator Build Checklist

One Final Note: Run the Numbers Before You Fall in Love

House hacking is one of the best financial moves available to people in their 20s and 30s โ€” but the strategy only works if the individual deal works. The spreadsheet you build in this guide is your filter. Run every property you tour through it before you let yourself get excited.

A deal that looks great in a Zillow listing looks different when you plug in the actual expenses, vacancy, maintenance reserves, and realistic market rents. The ones that pass that filter are genuinely worth pursuing.

For more on analyzing rental investments, check out our guides on rental property ROI calculation, deal analyzer spreadsheets, and BRRRR strategy analysis.