For Australian property investors

Property Cashflow Calculator Australia

Understand whether your investment property is contributing to or dragging on your monthly cashflow.

Indicative insights only. Not financial advice.

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Why property cashflow matters

Cashflow shows whether rental income is covering the ongoing costs of holding an investment property. For many investors, the issue is not the whole portfolio. It is often one property creating most of the pressure.

How to calculate monthly property cashflow

Monthly cashflow = rental income − loan repayments − property expenses

Include rent, loan repayments, council rates, strata, insurance, repairs, property management fees, and other recurring costs.

Brikly goes beyond a one-off calculator

A calculator gives you a point-in-time number. Brikly tracks what changed over time, highlights which property is driving your cashflow position, and helps you see whether your actions improved the outcome.

What you see in Brikly

From a number to a decision

See which property is driving your cashflow

Track what changed since your last review

Understand whether actions improved performance

Frequently asked questions

Property cashflow, answered

What is property cashflow?

Property cashflow is the difference between rental income and the costs of holding the property, including loan repayments and recurring expenses.

What costs should I include?

Include loan repayments, property management fees, council rates, water rates, strata fees, insurance, repairs, maintenance, and other recurring costs.

Is positive cashflow always better?

Not necessarily. Cashflow is one signal. Investors may also consider capital growth, tax position, risk, and portfolio goals.

Does Brikly provide financial advice?

No. Brikly provides indicative insights based on available data. It does not provide financial advice.

See what is actually driving your portfolio.

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