R
%
%
R
%
R
R
%
Monthly Cash Flow
R -1 505
Negative gearing — supplementing with salary
Gross Yield
12.0%
Net Yield
7.3%
Bond Payment
R 4 859/mo
Effective Rent
R 4 950/mo
10-yr Capital Gain
R 434 966
10-yr Total Return
R 254 350
Deposit ROI (10 years on R 55 000 invested)
462% total return
R 434 966 capital gain + R 0 net rental income
FNB bond note: Bachelor flats under 30m² may require a 20% deposit and are subject to additional bond criteria. Confirm floor area with the seller before applying.
Why Bachelor Flats Offer the Highest Yield in SA Property How to use • Yield • Example

How to Use This Calculator

Enter the purchase price of the bachelor flat and your expected deposit (minimum 10%, but banks may require 20% for units under 30m²). Input the monthly rental income and set the levy, vacancy rate (typically 8–12% for bachelor flats), and management fee (7–10% of rent). The calculator returns gross yield, net yield, monthly cash flow, and projected 10-year return including capital growth.

Use the Comparison tab to see how bachelor flat performance stacks up against 1-bedroom and 2-bedroom units at the same purchase price.

The Yield and ROI Formula

Bachelor flats consistently deliver the highest gross yields in the SA residential market because the purchase price is low relative to achievable rents.

Gross Yield (%) = Annual Rental Income ÷ Purchase Price × 100
Net Yield (%) = (Annual Rent × (1 − Vacancy) − Annual Expenses) ÷ Purchase Price × 100
Monthly Cash Flow = Effective Rent − Bond Repayment − Levy − Rates − Management Fee

Annual expenses include levy, municipal rates, maintenance, and the managing agent fee. The vacancy factor is particularly important for bachelor flats — at 10% vacancy, you receive rent for 10.8 months per year rather than 12.

Worked Example

Thandi buys a bachelor flat in Hatfield, Pretoria for R450,000 with a 10% deposit (R45,000). She bonds R405,000.

Bond (R405,000 at 10.25% over 20 years): R4,003/month

Monthly rent: R5,500  ·  Levy: R850  ·  Rates: R380  ·  Management (8%): R440  ·  Vacancy allowance (10%): −R550

Effective rent: R4,950  ·  Total expenses excl. bond: R1,670
Monthly cash flow: R4,950 − R4,003 − R1,670 = −R723/month

Gross yield: R5,500 × 12 ÷ R450,000 = 14.7%
Net yield after vacancy and expenses: 8.9%

After 10 years at 6% annual capital growth, the property is worth approximately R806,000 — a capital gain of R356,000 on a R45,000 deposit. Total 10-year ROI including rental income: over 800% on equity deployed.

Frequently Asked Questions

What rental yield do bachelor flats achieve in South Africa?

Bachelor flats in South Africa typically achieve gross rental yields of 9–12%, making them the highest-yielding residential property type. In high-demand areas like Joburg CBD, Hatfield (Pretoria), and Cape Town inner city, yields of 10–13% are achievable. This compares to 6–8% for 1-bedroom units and 5–7% for 2-bedroom units in the same areas.

Will FNB bond a bachelor flat in South Africa?

FNB will consider home loans on bachelor flats, but may require a 20% deposit for units under 30m² due to the higher risk profile. Standard Bank, Absa, and Nedbank have similar requirements. The key factor is floor area — units under 30m² may be classified differently by valuators. Always confirm the floor area with the developer or seller before applying for a bond.

What are the best areas for bachelor flat investment in South Africa?

The best areas are: Hatfield and Arcadia (Pretoria) for University of Pretoria student demand; Joburg CBD, Braamfontein, and Maboneng for young professionals and students; Cape Town CBD, De Waterkant, and Observatory for professionals and tourism; and Umhlanga for KZN coastal demand. High-density urban nodes near universities and business districts deliver the strongest yields.

What vacancy rate should I expect for a bachelor flat?

Bachelor flats typically experience 8–12% vacancy annually, higher than larger units (5–8% for 2-bedroom). The higher vacancy reflects faster tenant turnover — bachelor tenants (typically single young professionals or students) average 12–18 months per tenancy versus 24–36 months for 2-bedroom tenants. In student areas, vacancy spikes over December holidays.

Should I use a managing agent for my bachelor flat?

Given the higher tenant turnover rate, a managing agent (7–10% of rent) is strongly recommended for bachelor flats. The agent handles advertising, tenant vetting, lease administration, maintenance coordination, and rent collection. The Rental Housing Act and the PPRA (Property Practitioners Regulatory Authority) govern rental agents in South Africa.