What Is Gross Rental Income?
Gross rental income is the total amount of rent you collect from tenants before deducting any expenses. It is the top-line number that looks great on paper but does not tell the whole story.
If you rent out your property for RM 3,000/month, your gross rental income is RM 36,000/year. Simple.
But here is the thing: not a single ringgit of that is pure profit. You have bills to pay.
What Is Net Rental Income?
Net rental income is what you actually keep after paying all the expenses associated with owning and maintaining the property. This is the number that truly matters.
Formula:
Net Rental Income = Gross Rental Income - Total Operating Expenses
Common Expenses That Eat Into Your Rent
Here are the typical costs a Malaysian property investor faces:
- Maintenance/service charges: RM 200 - RM 800/month for condos
- Sinking fund: Usually 10% of maintenance charges
- Quit rent (cukai tanah): RM 50 - RM 300/year
- Assessment tax (cukai taksiran): RM 200 - RM 1,000/year
- Insurance: RM 300 - RM 800/year
- Repairs and maintenance: Budget 5-10% of annual rent
- Property management fee: 8-12% of rent if using an agent
- Vacancy allowance: Budget 1-2 months vacant per year
Case Study: KL Condo
Let us break down a real-world scenario:
| Item | Monthly (RM) | Annual (RM) |
|---|---|---|
| Rental income | 3,000 | 36,000 |
| Maintenance fee | -450 | -5,400 |
| Sinking fund | -45 | -540 |
| Quit rent + assessment | - | -600 |
| Insurance | - | -500 |
| Repairs budget (5%) | -150 | -1,800 |
| Vacancy (1 month) | - | -3,000 |
| Net Rental Income | - | 24,160 |
Your gross income was RM 36,000, but your net income is only RM 24,160. That is a 33% difference. If you based your investment decision only on gross income, you would have overestimated your returns by a third.
The US Comparison
In the US, the expense ratio is typically even higher. Property taxes alone can be 1-2% of the property value annually. A $200,000 rental home in Texas might generate $1,500/month ($18,000/year) in gross rent, but after property taxes ($4,000), insurance ($1,200), maintenance ($1,800), and vacancy ($1,500), the net income drops to about $9,500/year.
The Bottom Line
Never make investment decisions based on gross rental income alone. Always calculate your net rental income to understand your true cash flow. The gap between gross and net is where amateur investors get burned.
