Enter Values
Model Assumptions
Included in Operating Expenses:
- Property taxes & insurance
- Routine maintenance & repairs
- Property management fee (opportunity cost)
- Landlord-paid utilities
- Other recurring property costs
Excluded (by convention):
- Mortgage payments / debt service
- Depreciation
- Income taxes
- Capital expenditures (CapEx)
Single-period annual analysis. For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Calculation Results
Expense Breakdown
| Expense Category | Amount | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Property Taxes | $60,000 | 40.0% |
| Insurance | $15,000 | 10.0% |
| Maintenance | $25,000 | 16.7% |
| Management Fee | $25,000 | 16.7% |
| Utilities | $15,000 | 10.0% |
| Other Expenses | $10,000 | 6.7% |
| Total | $150,000 | 100% |
Illustrative OER Ranges by Property Type
| Property Type | Typical OER | Lease Structure |
|---|---|---|
| Multifamily | 35–50% | Gross lease; landlord pays most expenses |
| Office (Full-Service) | 40–55% | Full-service gross; landlord absorbs operating costs |
| Industrial / Warehouse | 20–30% | Modified gross or NNN; lower operating intensity |
| Retail (NNN) | 10–20% | Triple-net; tenants pay expenses directly |
Formula Breakdown
Understanding Operating Expense Ratio
What is Operating Expense Ratio?
The Operating Expense Ratio (OER) measures property-level operating efficiency by comparing total operating expenses to effective gross income (EGI). A lower OER means a higher percentage of rental income flows through to net operating income (NOI).
NOI Margin = 1 - OER = NOI / EGI
Implied NOI = EGI - Total Operating Expenses
What Counts as Operating Expenses?
Operating expenses include all recurring property-level costs: property taxes, insurance, routine maintenance and repairs, property management fees, landlord-paid utilities, and miscellaneous expenses. Per industry convention, management fees should be included even if the owner self-manages because they represent an opportunity cost.
Why Does OER Vary by Property Type?
Lower OER (NNN / Industrial)
In triple-net leases, tenants pay operating expenses directly, reducing landlord OER to 10–30%. Industrial properties have lower operating intensity overall.
Higher OER (Office / Multifamily)
Full-service gross leases shift operating costs to the landlord, driving OER to 35–55%. More services and amenities also increase operating costs.
Practical Applications
- Efficiency Benchmarking: Compare OER across similar properties to identify operating inefficiencies
- Expense Budgeting: Break down expenses by category to target cost reductions
- Acquisition Analysis: Evaluate whether a property's expenses are in line with market norms
- NOI Forecasting: Use OER trends to project future net operating income
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and uses a single-period annual analysis. Operating expense ratios vary significantly by property type, lease structure, market, and management approach. Actual investment decisions should consider multi-year projections, capital expenditure plans, lease rollover risk, and local market conditions. Consult a qualified real estate professional or financial advisor for investment decisions.