In commercial property, relatively small increases in rent can translate into significant increases in asset value.
Business owners often see rent increases as a cost. Property investors see them differently, because in commercial property, income determines value.
Here is how that works in practice.
Commercial property is commonly valued using a capitalisation rate, or cap rate.
A cap rate is the return the market expects from a property’s income. In simple terms, it is how the market prices each dollar of rent, based on perceived risk, lease strength, location, and buyer demand. A lower cap rates mean buyers pay more for the same income.
The relationship is direct:
Value = Net Income ÷ Cap Rate
The cap rate reflects:
• Asset quality
• Location
• Lease strength
• Market conditions
For this example, we’ll use a 6.0% cap rate, which is conservative for a strong, leased asset.
Net income: $743,000
Cap rate: 6.0%
743,000 ÷ 0.06 = $12.38m
(Note: this already suggests upside versus cost, but we’ll ignore that for now.)
Net income (Year 5): $861,000
Same cap rate: 6.0%
861,000 ÷ 0.06 = $14.35m
Rent increased by $118,000 and capital value increased by approximately $1.97m
There was no sale required and no additional capital invested.
This is the non-linear effect: a relatively small increase in income creates a disproportionately large increase in value.
If you originally invested:
$3.15m (70% leverage), or
$5.25m (50% leverage)
Then that approximately $2m uplift in value translates into a large increase in equity relative to your original capital.
This is how:
• Equity compounds
• Loan-to-value ratios improve
• Refinancing options open up
This only works if:
• Rent growth is real and contracted
• The tenant remains strong
• Cap rates do not blow out materially
• The asset remains relevant to the market
Once you see how modest rent growth, combined with time and sensible leverage, can create millions in equity without selling or expanding, property stops looking like dead capital.
It becomes:
• A balance sheet stabiliser
• A long-term wealth engine
• A strategic asset alongside the business
Business owners are right to be cautious with debt. But commercial property debt, when supported by strong leases and sensible leverage, can really help wealth grow.
Understanding that difference does not make you aggressive. It makes you informed.
And informed decisions compound.
Every situation is different. If you want to understand how rent growth and asset value could play out for your property or development, the team at Attika can help you model it in the context of your business, location, and long-term goals.