ROI Calculator · Punta Cana
Know your real return before you commit
Estimate rental yield, cash flow, appreciation, and CONFOTUR savings on any property — using your own assumptions, not a developer’s brochure.
What's your real return?
Estimate rental yield, cash flow, appreciation, and the CONFOTUR savings on any property — using your own assumptions, not a developer's brochure.
What each term means
Every figure above comes from the assumptions you enter — nothing is a market guarantee. Each input and result is defined below in plain terms, listed alphabetically so you can find any term fast.
- Annual appreciation
- How much you expect the property's value to grow each year. An assumption, not a guarantee — be conservative.
- Annual cash flow
- What's left in your pocket each year after expenses and any mortgage. The number that tells you whether the property pays for itself.
- Annual debt service
- Your total mortgage payments for the year — principal plus interest — when you finance.
- Appreciation gain
- The increase in value over your projection period — projected value minus purchase price.
- Avg. nightly rate (short-term)
- What you expect to charge per night, averaged across the year. Your assumption — base it on comparable listings or real occupancy data, not a developer's projection.
- Cash-on-cash return
- Annual cash flow divided by the actual cash you put in. Shows how hard your invested money works each year when you finance.
- Closing costs (financing)
- One-time costs to close the purchase and loan — legal (~0.4%), appraisal, setup. Paid upfront, so they're added to your cash invested.
- CONFOTUR savings
- The taxes you don't pay thanks to CONFOTUR — the one-time 3% transfer tax plus the IPI you'd otherwise owe each year.
- CONFOTUR-certified project
- Whether the property sits in a project with CONFOTUR tourism-incentive status. If it does, the first buyer is exempt from the 3% transfer tax and the annual IPI property tax for up to 15 years — a real lift to net return. Always verify the certification independently.
- Down payment (financing)
- The share of the price you pay in cash. In a pre-construction purchase, the amount you've already paid the developer during construction typically serves as this.
- Gross annual income
- Your total rental income for the year, before any expenses.
- HOA / month
- The monthly building or homeowners-association fee — amenities, common areas, security.
- Insurance / yr
- Annual property insurance (and, when you finance, often a life policy the bank requires).
- Interest rate (financing)
- Your mortgage's annual rate. Dominican mortgages run higher than US ones — use the rate a DR bank actually quotes you, not a US assumption.
- Loan term (financing)
- The number of years over which you repay the mortgage.
- Maintenance / yr
- What you set aside each year for repairs and upkeep.
- Management
- The fee a property manager charges, as a percentage of rental income. Short-term runs high — cleanings, check-ins, listings, guest support. Long-term runs much lower, because a tenant lives there and the work is minimal.
- Monthly rent (long-term)
- The fixed monthly rent a tenant pays under a lease.
- Net operating income (NOI)
- Gross income minus operating expenses. The property's earning power on its own, before any mortgage.
- Net yield (cap rate)
- NOI divided by purchase price. The standard way to compare properties on earning power alone, setting financing aside.
- Occupancy (short-term)
- The share of nights you expect to be booked. 100% is never realistic — this is how a short-term rental accounts for the empty nights.
- Operating expenses
- Everything it costs to run the property in a year — management, maintenance, HOA, insurance, utilities, and IPI if the property isn't CONFOTUR-exempt.
- Prepay penalty (financing)
- A fee some DR banks charge — often 2.5–3% of the loan — for paying it off early. You set the percentage in the financing inputs; the result line shows the estimated amount, which only applies if you actually sell or refinance before the term ends.
- Projected value
- What the property could be worth at the end of your projection period, based on your appreciation assumption.
- Projection
- How many years out you want to model the total return.
- Purchase price
- The total price you pay for the property, in USD. Every return figure is measured against this number.
- Rental strategy
- Short-term is vacation-style renting by the night (Airbnb-style); income rises and falls with your nightly rate and occupancy. Long-term is a tenant on a lease, usually 12 months; income is steadier but lower per night, and it costs far less to manage.
- Total cash invested
- The real money out of your pocket: down payment + closing costs + the 3% transfer tax (unless CONFOTUR exempts it).
- Total projected profit
- Your cumulative cash flow over the projection period plus the appreciation gain. The big-picture number.
- Total ROI over projection
- Total projected profit expressed as a percentage of the cash you invested.
- Utilities (electricity, water, internet, gas, cable)
- The monthly services that keep the unit running. In a short-term rental you typically cover all of them yourself — and electricity runs high in Punta Cana with the AC going — while in a long-term lease the tenant usually pays their own, so you'd leave these at zero. Enter each service separately and the calculator totals them and folds them into your annual expenses.
- Vacant months / yr (long-term)
- How many months a year the unit sits empty, typically between tenants. Even a solid lease usually has a turnover gap, so assuming zero overstates your income.
Faq
Return on investment (ROI) calculations help investors gauge the financial performance of properties. Understanding how these calculations work is essential for investors looking to make informed decisions. This section provides clear answers to common inquiries about ROI and its applications in real estate investment.
A: It starts with your gross rental income, subtracts operating expenses (management, maintenance, HOA, insurance, and IPI if the property isn’t CONFOTUR-exempt) to get net operating income, then measures that against the purchase price for your net yield, or cap rate. Add appreciation over time and, if you finance, your debt service, and you get your total return. The calculator above runs all of this from the assumptions you enter.
A: There’s no single number — it depends on the property, the location, your rental strategy, and your costs. Short-term (vacation) rentals can post higher gross income but carry higher management fees and variable occupancy; long-term leases are steadier but lower. Rather than trust a headline figure from a brochure, enter your own assumptions above and see the net yield your specific numbers produce.
A: Yes, meaningfully. A CONFOTUR-certified project exempts the first buyer from the 3% transfer tax and the annual IPI property tax for up to 15 years, which lifts your net return. The calculator factors this in when you toggle CONFOTUR on. Just remember the benefit attaches to the project, not to you — always verify the certification independently. See our CONFOTUR guide for how.
A: Model both. Short-term renting (by the night) can generate more gross income but assumes occupancy below 100% and higher management costs. Long-term renting (a 12-month lease) is more predictable, costs less to manage, but usually carries a vacancy gap between tenants. The calculator lets you switch strategies and adjusts the management and vacancy inputs for each.
A: Financing changes two things: it lowers the cash you put in (raising your cash-on-cash return if the property cash-flows), but it adds debt service that eats into your annual cash flow. Because Dominican mortgage rates run higher than US rates, the impact is significant — enter the rate a DR bank actually quotes you in Advanced mode rather than a US assumption. Our guide on paying for pre-construction explains how the mortgage works for foreign buyers.
A: Because your return isn’t only rental income — it’s also the growth in the property’s value over time. Projecting a conservative annual appreciation across the years you plan to hold shows your total profit, not just the yearly cash flow. Appreciation is an assumption, never a guarantee, so be cautious with the number you enter.
A: No. The calculator is an educational tool. Every result is driven by the assumptions you enter, and figures like occupancy, nightly rate, and appreciation are not market guarantees. Use it to understand the mechanics and compare scenarios — then verify any real decision with a qualified Dominican attorney, accountant, and your own market data.