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ARV Calculator (70% Rule)

Know your number before you make an offer. Enter the after-repair value and rehab budget to get your maximum allowable offer and see instantly whether a flip leaves room for profit.

Deal Inputs

The realistic resale value once fully renovated, based on comparable sold homes.

The 70% rule is the flipper standard. Lower it in soft markets, raise it for light cosmetic flips.

Optional: enter the seller price to see if the deal fits your max offer.

Offer Analysis

$170,000
Max Allowable Offer (MAO)
$210,000
Budget for Purchase + Profit
73.3%
Purchase as % of ARV
Asking price is too high

The asking price exceeds your MAO. Negotiate down, cut rehab scope, or pass.

-$10,000
Spread vs. Asking Price

How much room you have under the MAO. Positive means the deal pencils out.

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How the ARV and 70% Rule Work

Every successful flip starts with two estimates: what the property will be worth fully renovated (the ARV) and what the renovation will cost. The 70% rule combines them into a single disciplined offer ceiling. You take 70% of the ARV, then subtract your rehab costs, and the result is your Maximum Allowable Offer, or MAO. That built-in 30% cushion is what pays for holding costs, selling costs, financing, and your profit.

This calculator also shows your purchase as a percentage of ARV, which is the all-in basis (offer plus rehab) divided by the ARV. Keeping that figure at or below your rule percentage is the quick visual confirmation that the deal protects your margin.

Worked Example

You find a tired property that will be worth $300,000 once renovated, and you estimate $40,000 in rehab. Applying the 70% rule: $300,000 times 0.70 is $210,000, your budget for purchase plus profit. Subtract the $40,000 rehab and your maximum allowable offer is $170,000.

If the seller is asking $180,000, the deal is $10,000 over your MAO, so the calculator flags it as too high. You would either negotiate the price down to $170,000 or below, trim the rehab scope, or walk away. If you could buy at $165,000, your spread would be a positive $5,000 under the ceiling, and the deal pencils out.

Practical Tips

Get the ARV right above all else. An inflated ARV makes every other number look good and is the fastest way to lose money on a flip. Anchor it to real, recent, renovated comps.

Pad your rehab estimate. First-time flippers almost always underestimate repairs. Add a contingency so a surprise behind the walls does not erase your margin.

Adjust the rule to the market. Tighten to 65% in soft markets to stay safe, and only stretch above 70% on low-risk cosmetic projects in strong markets.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is ARV in real estate?

ARV stands for After Repair Value: the price a property will realistically sell for once it has been fully renovated. It is the cornerstone of fix-and-flip and BRRRR analysis. ARV is estimated from recently sold comparable homes in the same area that match the condition you plan to achieve, not from the property's current distressed state.

What is the 70% rule for house flipping?

The 70% rule says a flipper should pay no more than 70% of the ARV minus the rehab costs. So if a home will be worth $300,000 after repairs and needs $40,000 of work, your maximum offer is ($300,000 x 0.70) minus $40,000, which equals $170,000. The 30% buffer covers holding costs, selling costs, financing, and your profit margin.

How do I estimate the ARV accurately?

Pull three to five comparable homes that sold recently (ideally in the last six months) within about a mile, similar in size, bed/bath count, age, and renovated to a level matching your plan. Average their sale prices, adjusting for differences. An agent's comparative market analysis or an appraiser can sharpen the estimate. A wrong ARV is the most common reason flips lose money.

Should I always use 70%?

The 70% rule is a starting point, not a rigid law. In hot markets with low inventory you might stretch to 75%, and on light cosmetic flips with minimal risk some investors go higher. In soft or declining markets, drop to 65% or lower to protect your margin. This calculator lets you change the percentage to match the deal and the market.

Does the MAO include holding and selling costs?

The 30% buffer in the 70% rule is designed to absorb holding costs (taxes, insurance, utilities, loan interest while you own it) and selling costs (agent commissions, closing fees) plus your profit. It does not itemize them. For a precise deal, pair this MAO screen with a full flip analysis that lists every cost line by line.

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