Market Education · July 10, 2026

Gross Yield vs Net Yield: The Numbers Agents Skip

An agent sends you a one-pager. Clean layout, good photos, a headline number near the top: 10% gross yield. It looks strong. You do the mental math against your bank’s savings rate, and the number wins easily.

Nobody on that one-pager tells you that gross yield is the number before the property has cost you anything.

The Number That Sells the Property

Gross yield is simple by design. Take the annual rent, divide it by the purchase price, and multiply by 100. A ₦180,000,000 apartment renting for ₦18,000,000 a year gives you a clean 10%. It is easy to calculate, easy to compare across listings, and easy to put on a one-page brief.

It is also the number that gives the seller’s side the least work to defend. Gross yield does not ask what the property costs to run. It only asks what it earns before you have spent a single naira keeping it rented.

That is not dishonesty. Gross yield is a real, standard metric used everywhere in property investment, including markets far more mature than Lagos. The problem is not that agents quote it. The problem is when it is the only number quoted, and nobody follows it with the one that actually determines your return.

What Net Yield Adds Back

Net yield starts with the same rent, then subtracts all the costs of holding and managing the property before dividing by the purchase price. In Lagos, that usually means five things:

  • Property management or agency fee. Most managed lets in Lagos run 10% of annual rent for a full-service arrangement, sometimes less for a lighter-touch agency.
  • Service charge. Facility upkeep, security, generator fuel, common-area maintenance. On a managed apartment in a serviced development, this is a real annual cost, not a footnote.
  • Vacancy. No unit rents 365 days a year, every year, without exception. Tenant turnover, unit refresh between lets, and the odd slow quarter all cost you months, not headlines.
  • Maintenance and minor repairs. Fittings fail. Paint fades. Appliances age. This is a recurring cost, not a one-time event.
  • Insurance and renewal costs. Smaller individually, but they add up across a full year.

None of these is exotic. Every one of them is predictable and knowable before you sign anything. What is not acceptable is finding out about them after you have already paid.

A Real Lagos Example

Here is a worked example using figures typical of a managed 3-bedroom apartment in Lekki Phase 1.

Line ItemAnnual Amount
Purchase price₦180,000,000
Annual rent₦18,000,000
Gross yield10.0%
Less: management fee (10% of rent)₦1,800,000
Less: service charge₦3,000,000
Less: vacancy allowance₦1,000,000
Less: maintenance and repairs₦600,000
Less: insurance and renewal costs₦900,000
Total annual costs₦7,300,000
Net annual income₦10,700,000
Net yield5.9%

The gross number was 10%. The real number is 5.9%. Roughly four out of every ten naira of yield disappeared between the headline and the bank account, and every single cost that caused it was predictable.

This is not a worst-case scenario. It is a normal, well-managed property with no unusual problems. A poorly chosen development, an inexperienced management company, or a higher-than-average vacancy stretch can push that gap wider still.

Why the Gap Is the Real Risk

The gap between gross and net yield is not just an accounting detail. It is where most of the disappointment in Lagos property yields actually comes from.

Buyers rarely lose money because the market fell. They lose the expected return because the number they underwrote was never the number they would receive. A property bought on a 10% gross yield story, expecting something close to 10% in hand, will feel like underperformance the moment the real figure lands at 6%. Nothing went wrong with the property. The number was simply incomplete from the start.

This matters most for buyers underwriting a deal against a specific return target, whether that is a mortgage serviceability calculation, a comparison against alternative investments, or a hurdle rate set by a fund or family office. Underwrite the wrong number, every decision built on top of it inherits the error.

Four Questions to Ask Before You Believe a Yield Number

Before you accept any yield figure quoted to you, ask for the following. A serious advisor will have every answer ready. One who cannot answer these has not done the underwriting, regardless of how polished the one-pager looks.

  1. Is this gross or net? If the answer is not immediate and specific, treat the number as gross by default.
  2. What is the service charge, and is it included in this calculation? Ask for the actual annual figure, not an estimate.
  3. What management fee structure applies, and is it already subtracted? Full management, letting only, and self-managed all carry different real costs.
  4. What vacancy assumption is built in? Zero vacancy is not a real assumption. Ask what occupancy rate the projection actually uses.

How BCR Underwrites Yield

Every investment brief BCR prepares states both numbers, gross and net, side by side, with the cost assumptions shown rather than buried. We would rather a client see a lower number today and trust it completely than see a higher number and discover the difference after the purchase.

This is the same standard we apply to title verification and corridor analysis. If a number cannot survive being shown in full, it should not be shown at all.

If you are underwriting a Lagos property purchase and want the real yield, not the headline one, we are happy to walk you through the full calculation before you commit to anything.


Want the full underwriting behind a specific property? Book a consultation with BCR or subscribe to BCR Luxury Pulse for corridor-by-corridor analysis every two weeks.

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