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Herramienta Calculadora Gratuita

Calculadora de Tasa de Vacancia

Calcule la tasa de vacancia de su propiedad en segundos. Comprenda la vacancia física vs. económica, compare con estándares de la industria y tome decisiones basadas en datos para maximizar sus ingresos por alquiler.

Vacancy Rate Calculator

Calculadora de Tasa de Vacancia

Resultados

Sin Cálculos Aún

Ingrese los detalles de su propiedad y haga clic en "Calcular" para ver el análisis de su tasa de vacancia.

Cómo Funciona

1

Ingrese Detalles de la Propiedad

Ingrese el número total de unidades de alquiler y las vacancias actuales.

2

Agregue Unidades Vacantes

Especifique cuántas unidades están actualmente desocupadas.

3

Seleccione Período de Tiempo

Elija análisis mensual, trimestral o anual.

4

Obtenga Sus Resultados

Vea su tasa de vacancia, puntuación de salud e información accionable.

¿Por Qué Monitorear Su Tasa de Vacancia?

Comprender su tasa de vacancia es crucial para maximizar los retornos de propiedades de alquiler y tomar decisiones de inversión informadas.

Optimice Ingresos por Alquiler

Identifique fugas de ingresos y oportunidades para maximizar sus ingresos por alquiler.

Estime Ingresos Perdidos

Calcule el impacto financiero de las vacancias en su portafolio.

Compare el Rendimiento

Compare sus propiedades con estándares de la industria (5-8% tasa saludable).

Tome Decisiones Informadas

Use datos para guiar estrategias de precios, marketing y mejoras de propiedades.

Puntos de Referencia de Tasa de Vacancia

Use estos estándares de la industria para evaluar el rendimiento de su propiedad.

StatusVacancy RateWhat It Means
Excelente0% - 3%Muy alta demanda, considere aumentar el alquiler
Bueno3% - 5%Condiciones de mercado saludables
Promedio5% - 8%Vacancia normal, espacio para mejorar
Por Debajo del Promedio8% - 10%Revise estrategia de precios y marketing
Pobre> 10%Problemas significativos, necesita atención inmediata

What is Vacancy Rate?

Vacancy rate is a key metric in rental property management that measures the percentage of units in a property or portfolio that are unoccupied at a given time. It serves as a critical indicator of a property's performance and is widely used by landlords, property managers, and real estate investors to assess demand, forecast revenue, and make informed investment decisions.

Understanding vacancy rate matters because every vacant unit represents lost rental income. For landlords, a rising vacancy rate can signal issues with pricing, property condition, marketing, or local market conditions. For investors, vacancy rate is essential for evaluating potential acquisitions and comparing properties across different markets. Lenders also consider vacancy rates when underwriting loans for rental properties, making it a figure that directly impacts financing terms.

Physical vs. Economic Vacancy Rate

There are two common ways to measure vacancy. The physical vacancy rate is the simplest: it counts how many units are physically unoccupied relative to the total number of units. The economic vacancy rate goes further by measuring the actual number of days units sit vacant over a period, giving you a more precise view of income loss over time. A unit that was vacant for half a month, for example, contributes less to economic vacancy than one empty for the full month.

Vacancy rate and occupancy rate are two sides of the same coin. If your vacancy rate is 8%, your occupancy rate is 92% (calculated as 100% − Vacancy Rate). Both metrics are useful, but vacancy rate is more commonly referenced when discussing areas for improvement, while occupancy rate is often used to highlight portfolio strength.

How to Calculate Vacancy Rate

Three formulas every landlord and investor should know

Physical Vacancy Rate

The most straightforward calculation. Divide the number of vacant units by the total number of units, then multiply by 100 to get a percentage.

Physical Vacancy Rate = (Vacant Units ÷ Total Units) × 100

Worked Example

If you have 20 units and 3 are vacant:

(3 ÷ 20) × 100 = 15% vacancy rate

Occupancy Rate

Occupancy rate is the inverse of vacancy rate. Once you know one, you immediately know the other.

Occupancy Rate = 100% − Vacancy Rate

Using the example above, a 15% vacancy rate means an 85% occupancy rate.

Economic Vacancy Rate

This time-based formula captures partial vacancies and gives a more accurate picture of revenue loss. Instead of simply counting empty units, it measures how many rentable days were actually rented.

Economic Vacancy Rate = ((Total Rentable Days − Actual Rented Days) ÷ Total Rentable Days) × 100

For example, if your portfolio has 600 total rentable days in a month and tenants occupied units for 540 of those days: ((600 − 540) ÷ 600) × 100 = 10% economic vacancy rate.

Skip the manual math. The calculator above handles all three calculations automatically. Enter your property details and get instant results for physical vacancy rate, economic vacancy rate, and occupancy rate in one step.

What is a Good Vacancy Rate?

Context matters — here is how to interpret your results

There is no single “good” vacancy rate that applies to every situation. What counts as healthy depends on your local market, property type, and asset class. A vacancy rate that is perfectly normal in a rural area might signal problems for a Class A apartment building in a major metro. That said, the national average for residential rental properties in the United States typically falls between 6% and 7%, which can serve as a useful baseline.

Vacancy Rate Rating Scale

This calculator uses the following scale to rate your vacancy rate, which aligns with widely accepted industry benchmarks:

Excellent
≤ 3%— Typical of high-demand markets and premium properties. Strong tenant retention and minimal turnover.
Good
3 – 5%— Indicates a healthy, well-managed portfolio with competitive pricing and good tenant satisfaction.
Average
5 – 8%— Typical for most markets. Normal turnover between tenants with no major concerns.
Below Average
8 – 12%— May need attention. Could indicate pricing issues, poor property condition, or weakening local demand.
Poor
> 12%— Significant revenue loss. Immediate action is recommended to address root causes.

Tips for Reducing Your Vacancy Rate

  • Price competitively. Research comparable rentals in your area and adjust rents to stay aligned with the market. Overpricing is one of the most common causes of extended vacancies.
  • Minimize turnover time. Start marketing units before current tenants move out and streamline your make-ready process so units are rent-ready within days, not weeks.
  • Invest in tenant retention. Respond quickly to maintenance requests, maintain clean common areas, and consider modest renewal incentives. Keeping a good tenant is almost always cheaper than finding a new one.
  • Improve your listing quality. Use professional photos, write detailed descriptions, and list on multiple platforms to maximize exposure and attract qualified applicants faster.

Preguntas Frecuentes

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