The four yield metrics — and why all of them matter

Investors regularly quote "yield" without specifying which one they mean — and the difference between them is large. On the same property, gross yield might be 6.5% while cash-on-cash return is 1.2%. Both are technically correct. Neither is the full picture on its own.

MetricWhat it measuresWhat it ignores
Gross yieldAnnual rent / purchase priceAll costs: vacancy, maintenance, IMI, tax
Net yieldNet rent (after running costs) / purchase priceIMT, financing, tax on income
Cap rateNOI / purchase priceFinancing structure (unlevered return)
Cash-on-cashAnnual cash flow / capital deployedCapital appreciation

For investment analysis, use them in sequence: gross yield for initial screening, cap rate for comparing properties on an equal footing, and cash-on-cash for understanding the actual return on your capital once financing is in place.

Gross yield — the first filter

Gross yield Annual rent / Purchase price × 100

Gross yield is the starting point, not the destination. It tells you how much rent the property generates relative to its price, before any costs. It's useful for quickly comparing a large number of properties — anything below 4.5–5% gross yield in Lisbon is unlikely to make sense as a pure income investment once you strip out costs.

The problem: gross yield on a property listed at €280,000 with €1,600/month rent looks like 6.9% — but that number includes nothing about vacancy, annual IMI, condominium fees, maintenance, or IRS on income. The real return is lower.

Cap rate — the property's true operating return

Cap rate NOI / Purchase price × 100

Cap rate (capitalisation rate) is the metric most serious investors use to compare properties. NOI (Net Operating Income) = annual rent minus vacancy loss minus all operating expenses including IMI. Importantly, cap rate is calculated before financing — it measures the property's performance independent of how you're paying for it.

Above 6%Strong — likely above-zone or emerging area. Verify the reason: price delta, renovation needed, or genuine mispricing.
4–6%Average for Lisbon. Acceptable if financing is conservative and you're targeting capital appreciation as well.
Below 4%Thin. Only justifiable in premium zones where capital appreciation and liquidity compensate for weak income yield.

Cash-on-cash — what you actually earn on your capital

Cash-on-cash Annual cash flow / Capital invested × 100

Cash-on-cash is the most honest measure of investment performance: it compares the annual cash flow (after paying the mortgage) to the total capital you actually deployed — down payment plus IMT, IS, notary, legal fees, and any renovation costs.

For most leveraged buy-to-let investments in Portugal in 2026, cash-on-cash return sits between 1–4% pre-tax. After IRS at 28% on net rental income for non-residents, after-tax cash-on-cash can be close to breakeven on many deals. This is why property selection and deal quality matter so much more than market selection.

Worked example: Alvalade T2, Lisbon

A two-bedroom apartment in Alvalade — one of Lisbon's most stable residential zones — priced at €280,000.

Property Alvalade T2 · €280,000 · Estimated rent €1,600/month
MetricCalculationResult
Gross yield€19,200 / €280,0006.86%
Vacancy loss (5%)€19,200 × 5%−€960
Operating costs (condo, maintenance, insurance)estimated−€3,800
IMI (0.4% of price)€280,000 × 0.4%−€1,120
NOI€13,320
Cap rate€13,320 / €280,0004.76%
Mortgage (€196k, 30yr, 5.5%)−€13,356
Annual cash flow (pre-tax)−€36 (breakeven)
Capital invested (30% dp + costs ~€20k)€104,000
Cash-on-cash~0% pre-tax
The honest read: at current financing rates, a standard Alvalade T2 at market price generates approximately breakeven cash flow. The investment thesis here is capital appreciation — not current income. If income return is your primary goal, you need a lower purchase price, a higher rent, a below-market deal, or a more affordable zone.

2026 benchmarks by city

Gross yield ranges for T1–T2 apartments in typical residential condition across Portugal's main investment markets:

MarketGross yieldEst. cap rateProfile
Lisbon — premium (Chiado, Príncipe Real)3–4.5%1.5–2.5%Capital appreciation play
Lisbon — mid (Alvalade, Areeiro)5.5–7%3.5–5%Balanced income + appreciation
Lisbon — emerging (Mouraria, Intendente)7–9%5–7%Income-first, higher risk
Porto — premium (Foz, Boavista)4–5.5%2.5–4%Similar to Lisbon premium
Porto — mid (Bonfim, Paranhos)6–8%4–6%Better yield, lower entry price
Algarve (Lagos, Tavira)5–7%*3–5%*Long-term only; STR adds complexity
Braga / Coimbra6–8%4.5–6.5%University cities; lower entry prices
Setúbal / Almada5.5–7%3.5–5%Lisbon commuter belt; strong demand

What most affects rental yield in Portugal

  • Purchase price relative to the zone. The single biggest lever. A property bought 10% below zone average immediately gains ~1pp in gross yield. This is why investifique focuses on price delta detection.
  • IMT and acquisition costs. At 6.5% for investment properties plus IS and notary, acquisition costs add ~8–9% to your effective cost base. This compresses yield on any given asking price.
  • IMI. At 0.3–0.45% annually, IMI reduces NOI by a fixed amount. Often overlooked in quick yield calculations but material over time.
  • Vacancy rate. Lisbon's long-term rental vacancy is low — typically 3–6% in established zones. In emerging zones or if you are an absent landlord, budget conservatively at 8–10%.
  • Financing rate. In a higher-rate environment, the difference between a 4% and 6% cap rate becomes critical for debt service coverage. Cap rate above financing cost = positive leverage. Below = negative leverage.

Find properties where the yield is above the zone benchmark.

investifique's Yield Watch signal identifies properties where the estimated cap rate is meaningfully above comparable properties in the same zone — which is where the real opportunities are.