The Short Version:

    • The rental property that ticked every box on a popular checklist and still bled cash… and why that’s more common than people admit
    • The category of costs that never appears on a proforma but consistently destroys real estate returns
    • Why simple rules work in the conditions they were built for and fall apart the moment those conditions change
    • What experienced investors use instead of rules of thumb… and how to start building that same judgment

Many years ago, I bought a rental property that passed the 2% rule.

For those unfamiliar, the 2% rule is a shorthand used by real estate investors: if the monthly rent is at least 2% of the purchase price, the deal cash flows. Simple, fast, easy to apply.

The property I bought cleared that threshold comfortably. On paper, the numbers worked. In reality, I lost money on it.

I’ve written about this on BiggerPockets recently, and the reaction told me something: a lot of investors have had a version of this experience, and most of them quietly absorbed the loss without understanding what actually went wrong. So let me explain it clearly, because the lesson here matters more than the specific rule.

What the 2% Rule Is Actually Doing

Rules of thumb in real estate exist for a reason. They give new investors a quick filter. Instead of analyzing every property in depth, you can run a fast calculation and immediately eliminate deals that won’t work.

The 2% rule came out of a specific era in real estate investing, in specific markets, under specific conditions. When properties were cheaper and rehab costs were lower and certain categories of expense were more predictable, 2% rent-to-price was a reasonable proxy for cash flow viability.

The rule was never meant to be the last word. It was a first filter. Somewhere along the way, a lot of investors started treating it as a conclusion.

The Costs That Don’t Show Up on Paper

Here’s what the 2% rule doesn’t capture, and what my property taught me the expensive way.

Property location affects tenant quality. Not as a moral judgment, but as a practical reality. Lower-income neighborhoods produce higher tenant turnover. Higher turnover means more vacancies, more rehab between tenants, more advertising costs, more property management labor. None of this shows up when you run the 2% calculation.

Location also affects the quality of property managers available to you. Skilled property managers are selective. They gravitate toward properties where the math works for them too. In rougher neighborhoods, you end up with the managers who couldn’t attract better clients. I learned this lesson in Baltimore, buying in areas where I couldn’t find a competent, reliable property manager regardless of how hard I looked.

There’s also what I’d call the invisible expense category: things that don’t appear on any proforma because they’re impossible to predict in advance. Copper stripped from AC units. Appliances walked out of vacant units. Good tenants leaving not because of anything you did, but because crime in the neighborhood made the unit feel unsafe. These costs are real. They just don’t fit neatly into a spreadsheet row.

My 2% property had great numbers on acquisition day. By the time I factored in the actual vacancy rate, the actual tenant quality, the actual property manager I could find, and the actual condition I was returning units to between tenants, the deal didn’t work.

The Deeper Problem With Simple Rules

Rules of thumb are calibrated to historical averages in the conditions they were built for. The moment the market changes, the conditions shift, or you apply the rule outside its original context, the reliability degrades.

The 2% rule made more sense when properties in cash-flow markets were selling for $50,000. At $150,000 in the same market, a property generating 2% monthly rent doesn’t produce the same returns once you account for current insurance costs, property tax rates, and maintenance on an older asset. The rule stayed fixed while the underlying math moved.

This is not an argument against using rules of thumb to filter deals quickly. It’s an argument against treating any single metric as a substitute for actually understanding what you’re buying.

Good investors use rules of thumb to eliminate obvious losers. They use judgment, built from experience, to evaluate everything else.

(article continues below)

Real estate investments? Awesome.
Being a landlord? Less fun.

Learn how to earn 15%+ on passive real estate investments in our free video course.

Course: passive real estate investing from anywhere in the world

What Replaces the Rule

The investors I’ve watched consistently do well share a common approach. They start with a filter, then go deeper.

Beyond the basic rent-to-price ratio, they’re asking: what does vacancy actually look like in this submarket, not the metro average? What do property managers who work this area say about tenant turnover? What are the realistic maintenance costs on a property of this age and construction type? What are the taxes actually doing, not what the current owner is paying?

They’re stress-testing assumptions. If vacancy is 10% instead of 5%, does the deal still work? If a major repair hits in year two, can it absorb that without going negative? If interest rates stay elevated and the exit cap rate compresses, what does the return look like at disposition?

This kind of thinking takes longer than running a 2% calculation. It also produces dramatically different outcomes. The deals that look great under a rule of thumb and fall apart under scrutiny get eliminated. The deals that survive scrutiny are the ones worth owning.

The Underlying Principle

Simple investing rules exist to make the first cut faster. They are not a substitute for understanding the investment.

Every rule was built in a specific context. When that context holds, the rule works. When conditions shift, markets change, or you move to a different asset type or geography, the rule may still look valid on the surface while producing completely different results underneath.

The investors who get hurt aren’t always the ones who ignored the rules. Sometimes they’re the ones who followed them too faithfully, without ever asking what the rule was actually trying to measure and whether it was still measuring that thing accurately.

(article continues below)

compare rental property loansWhat short-term fix-and-flip loan options are available nowadays?

How about long-term rental property loans?

We compare several buy-and-rehab lenders and several long-term landlord loans on LTV, interest rates, closing costs, income requirements and more.

What I Do Now

I no longer buy rental properties directly. After enough expensive lessons, I made a deliberate shift toward passive real estate investing, where experienced operators do the deep due diligence on every deal before capital goes in.

In our Co-Investing Club, we vet investments together every month. We’re not just running calculations. We’re asking hard questions about operators, debt structure, market conditions and downside scenarios. We’re looking for deals that work under stress-tested assumptions, not just under optimistic ones.

It’s a different approach than buying a property and hoping the numbers hold. And it’s produced meaningfully different results.

About the Author

G. Brian Davis is a real estate investor and cofounder of SparkRental who spends 10 months of the year in South America. His mission: to help 5,000 people reach financial independence with passive income from real estate. If you want to be one of them, join Brian and Deni for a free class on How to Earn 15-25% on Fractional Real Estate Investments.

Connect with us on social!

FREE Webinar: Open $250K in Credit Lines for Investing

On Wed. 3/23/22 at 2pm & 8pm EST, Deni & Brian are hosting Fund&Grow for a free webinar to show you how to open up to $250,000 in unsecured business credit lines for real estate investing.

Free Background Check

Run a FREE housing & identity check!

Credit, criminal, eviction reports also available.

Want to create passive income?

 

We’ll email a series of videos in our free course,

to help you start earning income from rentals.

[mc4wp_form id=”501″]

Privacy Policy: Your info will never be shared or sold to a 3rd party. Even if Dr. Evil offers us 1 million dollars 🙂

Rental ROI Ebook

Want to earn more from your rentals?

 

Download our free Ultimate Guide to Higher ROI and be dazzled by the charming wit, disarming frogs and invaluable tips for higher profits and less work.

 

[mc4wp_form id=”501″]

Free Mini-Course: Passive Income from 2-4 Unit Multifamilies

Free Mini-Course: Passive Income from 2-4 Unit Multifamilies

 

Ready to build passive income from small multifamily properties?

Over the next week, we'll email you a free series of videos, so enter your best email and let's get started!

You're in! Check your email to confirm, and you can email us directly at support@18.188.234.137 with any questions :-)

Free Webinar: Earn 15-50% on Passive Real Estate Syndications

LIVE masterclass on Tues. 10/25 @ 8pm EST

Your seat is reserved! Check your email to confirm.

Inside a group real estate investment

Here's a quick video breakdown of a past group investment — and how it's performed since our Co-Investing Club invested in it in early 2023.

You got it! Check your email for the link, and some other fun freebies.

Ready to Build Passive Income?

Ready to Build Passive Income?

 

We'll email you the course videos over the next week, so enter your best email!

You're in! Check your email to confirm.

Ditch Your Day Job: Free 8-Video Course

 

Our brand new course on how to reach financial independence and retire early (FIRE) with rental properties is open for one week from Oct. 23-30!

You're in! Check your email for the link, or click here for the 1st video!

Rental Application Inbound!

 

Not only do you get our free rental application, but we'll also send you our free passive income mini-course. How's that sound?

[newsletter_form type="minimal" button_color=#D5C218 show_name="true" list="10" /]

Awesome! Check your email to confirm to download :-)

How do group real estate investments work?

If you want the cash flow, appreciation, and tax benefits of real estate without hassling with loans or landlording, learn how to invest passively. 

Awesome! Check your email :-)

How to Earn 15%+ Returns on Hands-Off Real Estate Investments

In a live online workshop on Tues. 9/10, we'll break down five ways to invest passively in real estate that you've never heard of.

Awesome! Check your email :-)

Hack the Rich: 7 Secrets We've Learned from Private Equity Real Estate

In a free workshop, we share 7 secrets we've learned from the rich over the last few years of investing in private equity real estate syndications.

Awesome! Check your email :-)