ARV Calculator · After Repair Value & Maximum Bid

ARV Calculator

After Repair Value · 70% Investor Rule · Maximum Bid Price · ROI

Select Your Currency
Property value · Method
Purchase & Renovation
Investors purchase rule
%
Investment Analysis
After repair value (ARV)$350,000
Maximum bid price (70% rule)$200,000
Total project cost (bid + renovation)$245,000
Potential return on investment$105,000
ROI percentage42.9%

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Creator & Maintainer

Image of Faiq Ur Rahman, CEO & Founder Toolraxy

Faiq Ur Rahman

Founder & CEO, Toolraxy

Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.

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What Is an ARV Calculator?

An ARV (After Repair Value) Calculator is a real estate investment underwriting tool that estimates the maximum purchase price an investor should pay for a distressed property, given its projected post-renovation value and repair cost. It applies the industry-standard investor purchase rule—commonly known as the 70% rule—to ensure the remaining spread between the total project cost and the ARV delivers an acceptable return on investment.

 

Why This Tool Matters

In fix-and-flip investing, profitability is determined at the purchase, not the sale. Overpaying by just 5% for a property with a thin equity spread converts a projected 20% ROI into a break-even or a loss after closing costs and holding charges.

First, novice investors often negotiate emotionally, bidding up to the ARV minus repairs without reserving any profit margin. The 70% rule provides a disciplined ceiling. Second, ARV estimation can be subjective, but when you switch this tool to the area-based method, you anchor the valuation to objective per-square-meter comparable data. Third, the ability to adjust the purchase rule percentage from 70% to 65% or 75% allows a professional investor to stress-test the deal across different risk appetites in seconds.

 

How to Use the ARV Calculator — Step by Step

  1. Choose Your Valuation Method: Select “Value of the property” if you already have a defensible ARV from a broker price opinion, or select “Average price in the area” if you have comparable price-per-square-meter data.

  2. Enter the ARV Inputs: If using the direct method, input the estimated post-renovation sale value. If using the area method, enter the average renovated sales price per square meter and the property’s total area.

  3. Enter Purchase and Renovation Details: Input the price you believe you can negotiate for the property, and the total itemized renovation budget from your contractor. Warning: The most common underwriting error is entering a cosmetic repair estimate when the property needs a new roof or HVAC system. Ensure the renovation cost reflects the full scope of work; otherwise, the maximum bid price shown will be dangerously inflated.

  4. Set Your Purchase Rule Percentage: The default is the standard 70% rule. If your market is highly competitive, you may test 75%. If you require a larger margin for safety, test 65%.

  5. Review the Investment Analysis: Examine the maximum bid price to see the discipline boundary, then check the ROI percentage based on your actual purchase price to confirm the deal meets your minimum return threshold.

 

How It Works — The Formula Explained

The calculator uses two sequential formulas. First, if area-based valuation is selected:
ARV = Average_Area_Price × Total_Area
If the direct valuation method is chosen, the ARV is taken directly from user input.

Next, the central investor purchase rule is applied:
Maximum Bid Price = ARV × (Purchase_Rule / 100) − Renovation_Costs
Total Project Cost = Best_Purchase_Price + Renovation_Costs
ROI % = ((ARV − Total_Project_Cost) / Total_Project_Cost) × 100

The ARV is the post-renovation market value estimate. The Purchase_Rule is the percentage of ARV an investor is willing to risk, with 70% being the traditional standard. Renovation_Costs represent the full capital expenditure to bring the property to the ARV standard.

This framework is the standard acquisition underwriting methodology used by fix-and-flip operators and private real estate lenders. It is derived from the principle that the purchase price must be low enough that the forced appreciation from the renovation yields a return that compensates for the market, execution, and liquidity risk.

 

Real-Life Example

An investor is evaluating a dated 140 square meter property in a neighborhood where fully renovated comparable homes sell for an average of $2,500 per square meter. Using the area method, the ARV is calculated at $350,000. The investor has a contractor’s bid of $45,000 for a full renovation and applies the standard 70% rule.

The calculator displays a maximum bid price of $200,000—which is ($350,000 × 0.70) − $45,000. The investor negotiates and secures the property for exactly $200,000. The tool then displays a total project cost of $245,000 and a projected gross dollar return of $105,000. The ROI is calculated at 42.9%, well above the investor’s 20% minimum threshold, giving them full confidence to proceed.

 

ARV Calculator vs Doing It Manually

FeatureManual CalculationARV Calculator
Time Required10–15 minutes to write out and verify formulasUnder 3 seconds per scenario
Dual ARV MethodsRequires two separate spreadsheet tabsToggle between direct and area-based methods instantly
70% Rule FlexibilityMust manually edit cell formulas to test 65% or 75%Change a single percentage input field
Error RiskHigh; an incorrect bid-price formula can lead to a bad offerFormula is pre-validated; only inputs vary

Manual calculation is a necessary foundational skill, but in the field, speed and accuracy are your competitive edge. This calculator delivers both.

 

Who Should Use This Tool

  • Fix-and-flip investors underwriting a potential acquisition before submitting a formal offer through their agent.

  • Real estate wholesalers using the max bid price to construct a deal that leaves enough equity spread for their end-buyer to be profitable.

  • Hard money lenders quickly checking whether a borrower’s proposed purchase price falls within the acceptable LTV and ARV ratios defined by the 70% rule.

  • New real estate investors learning to internalize the discipline of the 70% rule as a mandatory check on their negotiation enthusiasm.

  • Real estate agents working with investor clients who want to provide a transparent, rule-based price analysis to justify a lower offer.

 

Key Benefits

  • Applies the 70% rule explicitly and mathematically, removing the temptation to fudge it when you emotionally want a property.

  • Offers two ARV estimation methods in one interface, so you can cross-check a direct broker price opinion against an objective square-meter comp.

  • Allows instant adjustment of the purchase rule percentage to model aggressive, baseline, and conservative offer scenarios for a negotiation.

 

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using the area price from a different neighborhood quality tier: A $2,500/m² comp from a street of fully updated homes used for a property on a distressed block will overstate the ARV and produce a dangerously high maximum bid.

  • Forgetting to include soft costs in the renovation budget: Permits, architectural drawings, and financing origination fees are real costs. If they are not in the renovation budget figure, they are being excluded from the project cost and will silently erode the real ROI.

  • Confusing the maximum bid price with the target purchase price: The max bid is the absolute ceiling. Any purchase price above this number, according to the rule, eliminates the required equity spread for a safe investment.

 

Limitations of This Tool

This ARV Calculator computes a gross dollar return and ROI based on the fixed purchase price and renovation costs. It does not account for ongoing holding costs (loan interest, property taxes, insurance) or transaction costs (closing fees and real estate commissions), which together can consume 30–50% of the projected gross spread on a typical flip. Use this tool as a critical first-screen to establish the maximum bid ceiling, but adjust the final projected profit downward by your estimated holding and selling costs before making a final investment commitment.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the 70% rule in real estate investing?
A: The 70% rule states that an investor should pay no more than 70% of the After Repair Value, minus the renovation costs. This provides a built-in profit margin. The calculator applies this rule precisely to the user’s inputs.

Q: How do I calculate ARV from price per square foot?
A: Multiply the average sale price per square meter of comparable renovated properties in the immediate area by the total square meters of the subject property. The calculator’s “Average price in the area” method performs this multiplication for you.

Q: What is the formula for the maximum allowable offer?
A: The formula is (ARV × Purchase_Rule_%) − Renovation_Costs. The calculator defaults to the 70% rule, but the purchase rule percentage is adjustable to test more conservative or aggressive scenarios.

Q: How do I calculate the maximum bid on a fix and flip?
A: Input the After Repair Value, renovation costs, and your minimum purchase rule percentage (typically 70%) into this ARV Calculator. The output reads “Maximum bid price,” which is the highest price you should pay to preserve your required equity spread.

Q: What is a good ROI for a house flip?
A: Experienced flippers generally target a minimum gross ROI of 20–30% on the total project cost. The calculator displays the ROI percentage, allowing you to instantly see if a specific purchase price meets that benchmark.

Q: How do I estimate repair costs for an ARV calculation?
A: The most reliable method is to obtain a detailed line-item bid from a licensed general contractor who has walked the property. Avoid using per-square-meter rough estimates for the renovation budget input.

Q: Can I change the purchase rule from 70% to something else?
A: Yes, the “Maximum bid percentage” field allows you to input any percentage. A lower percentage (65%) is more conservative and builds in a larger margin, while a higher percentage (75%) represents a more aggressive offer.

Financial Disclaimer

The content on this page and the results from this tool are for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You should consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. We do not guarantee the accuracy or applicability of any results to your specific situation.

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