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Net Operating Income (NOI) measures a property’s profitability by subtracting operating expenses from gross income. This guide explains its formula and importance.
Net Operating Income (NOI) is a key financial metric used primarily in real estate to measure the profitability of income-producing properties. It represents the income remaining after subtracting all operating expenses from gross income, excluding taxes, interest, depreciation, and amortization.
Definition
Net Operating Income (NOI) is the total revenue generated by a property minus all reasonable operating expenses required to maintain and operate that property.
NOI = Gross Operating Income – Operating Expenses
NOI = 1,200,000 – 300,000 = P900,000
Used to calculate capitalization rate (cap rate):
Cap Rate = NOI / Property Value
Helps investors compare potential returns across properties.
Shows operational health and efficiency.
Banks use NOI to assess loan eligibility.
| Metric | NOI | EBITDA |
|---|---|---|
| Sector | Real estate | Corporate/financial |
| Includes revenue from | Property operations | All business operations |
| Excludes | Taxes, interest, CapEx | Taxes, interest, depreciation |
| Purpose | Property valuation | Business performance |
No. Cash flow also subtracts financing costs and capital expenditures.
In most cases, yes, classified as an operating expense.
Yes, if a property’s expenses exceed its income.
Typically annually but can be analyzed monthly or quarterly.
Mainly for commercial real estate but can apply to rental properties.