Calculate capital expenditure reserves by summing replacement cost divided by remaining useful life for each major property system.
Capital expenditure (CapEx) reserves fund the eventual replacement of major property systems—roofs, HVAC units, water heaters, appliances, flooring, and more. Unlike routine maintenance, these are large, infrequent expenses that can cost thousands of dollars each. Without a dedicated reserve, a single capital expense can wipe out years of rental profit.
This calculator uses the component-method approach: for each major system, you enter its replacement cost and remaining useful life. The calculator divides replacement cost by remaining years to determine the annual funding requirement for each item, then sums them all to give your total annual CapEx reserve.
The component method is far more accurate than flat-percentage rules because it accounts for the actual condition and age of your property's systems. A property with a brand-new roof but a 15-year-old furnace has very different CapEx needs than one with the opposite profile. This calculator lets you model your specific situation and build a reserve that matches reality.
CapEx surprises are the number one reason landlords face cash flow emergencies. A systematic reserve based on actual component lifespans prevents this. Instead of guessing, you'll know exactly how much to set aside monthly so that when the roof or HVAC reaches end-of-life, the funds are ready. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis.
Annual CapEx per Item = Replacement Cost / Remaining Useful Life Total Annual CapEx = Σ(Replacement Costᵢ / Remaining Lifeᵢ) Monthly CapEx Reserve = Total Annual CapEx / 12
Result: $3,767/year — $314/month
Roof: $15,000 ÷ 10 = $1,500/yr. HVAC: $8,000 ÷ 5 = $1,600/yr. Water heater: $2,000 ÷ 3 = $667/yr. Total: $3,767/year or $314/month. This ensures funds are available when each system reaches end-of-life.
Flat-percentage rules (like the 1% rule) provide a rough estimate, but the component method is far superior for individual property analysis. By evaluating each system independently, you can identify properties with disproportionately high near-term CapEx needs and price your offers accordingly.
Roof (asphalt): 20–25 years, $8,000–15,000. HVAC: 15–20 years, $5,000–12,000. Water heater: 8–12 years, $800–2,500. Appliances: 10–15 years, $500–2,000 each. Flooring: 7–15 years, $2,000–8,000. Exterior paint: 7–10 years, $3,000–8,000.
Revisit your CapEx plan annually. As systems age, remaining life decreases and annual reserve requirements increase. When you replace a system, reset its entry with the new cost and full useful life. This keeps your reserve on track over the property's lifetime.
Maintenance covers routine repairs and upkeep (fixing a leaky faucet, replacing a thermostat). CapEx covers major component replacements (new roof, new HVAC system). CapEx items have long useful lives and high costs, while maintenance items are smaller and more frequent.
If a system is past its useful life, it could fail any time. The full replacement cost should be in your reserve immediately or budgeted aggressively. You cannot divide by zero, so treat it as needing replacement within 1 year.
Use industry averages as a starting point: asphalt roof 20–25 years, HVAC 15–20 years, water heater 8–12 years, appliances 10–15 years. Adjust based on actual condition, maintenance history, and any professional inspections.
Yes, if they represent significant costs. Interior paint ($3,000–5,000 every 5–7 years) and carpet ($2,000–5,000 every 7–10 years) are meaningful expenses that should be reserved for, especially in rental properties with tenant turnover.
CapEx reserves reduce your net cash flow but protect your actual returns. A property that looks profitable without CapEx reserves may actually lose money when a $15,000 roof replacement hits. Smart investors always deduct CapEx from their cash flow projections.
CapEx is not expensed in the year it's funded—it's capitalized and depreciated over its useful life when actually spent. A new roof, for example, is depreciated over 27.5 years (residential) or 39 years (commercial). Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.