Structure of a Real Estate Financial Model

Why Structure is Extremely Important

Imagine building a house without design.

  • No blueprint
  • No foundation
  • No order

It will collapse.

Same with financial models.

A structured model:
✔ Is easy to understand
✔ Is easy to change
✔ Avoids mistakes
✔ Looks professional
✔ Can be shown to investors

Basic Structure of a Real Estate Financial Model

A professional real estate model usually has 5–7 main sections.

Let’s understand each one.

Section 1: Assumptions / Inputs Sheet

This is the heart of the model.

All changeable values are placed here.

Typical Inputs:

Property Details:

  • Purchase price
  • Holding period
  • Exit cap rate
  • Appreciation rate

Rental Assumptions:

  • Monthly rent
  • Rent growth %
  • Vacancy rate

Expense Assumptions:

  • Maintenance
  • Taxes
  • Expense growth %

Financing Assumptions:

  • Loan amount
  • Interest rate
  • Loan tenure

💡 Rule:
All inputs must be in one place and color-coded (Blue).

ItemValue
Purchase Price₹50,00,000
Monthly Rent₹25,000
Vacancy5%
Expense Growth4%
Holding Period5 Years

Section 2: Timeline Section

Every real estate model works over time.

Timeline Example:

Year012345
PurchaseExit

Year 0 = Purchase
Year 1–4 = Operations
Year 5 = Exit (Sale)

Section 3: Revenue Calculation

This section calculates:

  • Gross Rent
  • Vacancy Loss
  • Effective Gross Income
Year123
Monthly Rent25,00026,00027,000
Annual Rent3,00,0003,12,0003,24,000
Vacancy(5%)(5%)(5%)
Effective Income2,85,0002,96,4003,07,800

💡 Rent should grow yearly using growth assumption.

Section 4: Operating Expenses

Now calculate:

  • Maintenance
  • Taxes
  • Insurance
  • Repairs
  • Management fees

Expenses also grow yearly.

Example:

Year123
Expenses80,00083,20086,528

Section 5: Net Operating Income (NOI)

Formula:

NOI = Effective Gross Income – Operating Expenses

This section is extremely important.

Example:

Year123
EGI2,85,0002,96,4003,07,800
Expenses80,00083,20086,528
NOI2,05,0002,13,2002,21,272

💡 This is the income used for valuation.

Section 6: Financing (If Loan Exists)

This section includes:

  • Loan amount
  • EMI
  • Interest portion
  • Principal repayment
  • Loan balance

This gives:
Cash Flow After Debt

Section 7: Cash Flow Statement

Now combine everything.

Cash Flow Includes:

  • Rental income
  • Expenses
  • Loan payment
  • Exit value (in final year)

Example Structure:

Year012345
Equity Investment(15L)
Cash Flow50k60k70k80k35L

💡 Year 0 is always negative (investment).

Section 8: Valuation & Returns

Now calculate:

  • IRR
  • NPV
  • Cash-on-Cash Return
  • Equity Multiple

These help answer:
Is this investment worth it?

Professional Flow of a Model

A professional real estate model flows like this:

Inputs

Timeline

Revenue

Expenses

NOI

Debt

Cash Flow

Valuation

Returns

If this flow is clear, your model is strong.

Common Structural Mistakes

❌ Mixing inputs and calculations
❌ No timeline
❌ No clear exit year
❌ Hardcoding numbers
❌ No separation of operating & financing

Chapter 5 Summary

  • Real estate model must follow structure
  • Inputs should be separate
  • Timeline is mandatory
  • Revenue and expenses must grow
  • NOI is central
  • Financing comes after NOI
  • Cash flow drives returns

What Comes Next – Chapter 6 Preview

Now that you know structure, next we learn:

How to analyze a property BEFORE building a model

Because:

You don’t start Excel first.
You first understand the property.

Read More: Marico Ltd. Financial Model: How I Built a DCF Valuation in Excel

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