This article covers the Rate of Return worksheet for the following property type:
- Cooperative (Co-op) Units
This article applies only to properties that are part of a cooperative association, where ownership is represented by shares of stock and a proprietary lease rather than a traditional deed. If your property is not part of a cooperative association, please refer to our companion article: How to Complete the Rate of Return Worksheet — Single-Family Homes, Condominiums, and Other Traditional Property Types
Disclaimer
This article is meant to help, not to substitute for professional advice. The math is yours — we strongly encourage you to verify all calculations independently and consult a licensed attorney or accountant before filing. RentJiffy is not responsible for errors or outcomes resulting from use of this guidance.
Why Co-ops Are Different
For most rental properties, the rate of return calculation is straightforward: you know your assessed value, your mortgage, and your income. Co-ops introduce two complications that make this harder.
Ownership structure. You do not own real property outright. You own shares of stock in a corporation (the co-op association), and those shares entitle you to occupy a specific unit under a proprietary lease. Because of this, the city cannot assess your unit individually — the real estate tax bill goes to the building as a whole.
Building-level debt. The co-op association itself may carry a mortgage on the building. That debt is shared across all shareholders. Your proportionate share of that building mortgage interest is a legitimate operating expense, and your proportionate share of the outstanding balance is a legitimate encumbrance that affects your equity calculation.
Both of these factors affect how you fill out the Rate of Return worksheet, and neither of them appears on any document you personally own. You will need to contact your co-op association or management company to get some of this information before you begin.
What You Need Before You Start
Gather the following before opening the worksheet.
From your own records:
- Your proprietary lease or share certificate (you need the number of shares you own)
- Your rental income for the 12-month reporting period
- Your out-of-pocket operating expenses for that same period (maintenance, repairs, fixed costs)
- Your personal mortgage on the unit, if applicable — specifically the interest paid during the reporting period and the outstanding principal balance at the end of the period
From the co-op association or management company:
- The total number of shares issued for the building
- The outstanding balance of any building-level or underlying mortgage
- The total mortgage interest paid by the association during your reporting period
- Your ownership percentage, if the association has already calculated it (some do, some don't)
- A breakdown of what your monthly carrying charge or maintenance fee covers
From DC Office of Tax and Revenue (OTR):
- The assessed value of the building. Search at mytax.dc.gov using the building's address. Because co-ops are taxed as a single parcel, you will find one assessment for the entire building — not your unit. In complexes with more than one building sharing an address or campus, confirm with your management company which tax record corresponds to your specific building before pulling the number.
Step 1: Set Your Reporting Period
DC RAD requires a reporting period of 12 consecutive months falling within the 15 months prior to registering your unit. Choose your beginning and ending month and year before you start filling in any numbers. All income and expense figures must fall within this same period.
Step 2: Calculate Your Ownership Percentage
Your ownership percentage is your shares divided by the total shares issued for the building, expressed as a decimal. You will use this percentage repeatedly throughout the calculation.
Formula: Your shares ÷ Total building shares = Ownership percentage
Example: 2,203 shares ÷ 1,000,000 total shares = 0.002203 (or 0.2203%)
If your management company gives you the percentage directly, confirm it matches this math. Some associations state the percentage in the proprietary lease; others only list the share count, which means you have to calculate it yourself. Do not assume the percentage in any document is correct without verifying the total share count.
Step 3: Calculate Your Assessed Value
Using the ownership percentage from Step 2, multiply the building's total assessed value by your ownership percentage. This is the figure DC RAD uses to represent the assessed value of your investment.
Formula: Building assessed value × Ownership percentage = Your assessed share
Example: $32,572,110 × 0.002203 = $71,756.36
Important note for multi-building complexes. If your co-op consists of more than one building on the same site, each building will have its own separate tax assessment and its own tax bill. Make sure you are using the assessed value for the specific building your unit is in — not a combined figure and not the other building's number. When in doubt, ask your management company to confirm which tax parcel corresponds to your unit before pulling any numbers from OTR.
Step 4: Calculate Gross Income
A. Total Scheduled Gross Income Add together all income sources for the reporting period:
- Maximum rental income at 100% occupancy
- Parking income (if applicable)
- Any other fees charged above rent (late fees, appliance fees, etc.)
- Any commissions or fees (laundry, vending, etc.)
- Any other sources of income
If a line does not apply, enter zero. The system requires a value in every field.
B. Subtract Vacancy Losses Deduct any rent that was uncollectable due to vacancy or non-payment during the period:
- Vacancy losses (rent lost due to vacant unit)
- Uncollected rents
Note: DC RAD caps deductible vacancy losses at 6% of maximum rental income. Any vacancy loss amount above that threshold cannot be deducted.
Gross Income = Total Scheduled Gross Income − Total Losses
Step 5: Calculate Operating Costs
DC RAD allows the following categories of operating expenses:
- Administrative costs (management fees, advertising, legal fees, telephone)
- Operating costs (trash collection, payroll, security, supplies)
- Fixed costs (insurance, licenses, permits)
- Maintenance and repair costs (painting, cleaning, repairs, service contracts)
- Property taxes
- Mortgage interest payments (interest only — not principal)
Important notes for co-op owners on two of these categories:
Property taxes. You do not receive a separate property tax bill — the tax is assessed on the building as a whole and paid by the association. Your proportionate share of that tax obligation is legitimately embedded in your monthly carrying charge. Do not attempt to deduct property taxes as a separate line item. Instead, include your full carrying charge under operating costs, which already captures your share of the building's taxes along with other building expenses.
Mortgage interest. DC RAD allows mortgage interest as an operating expense but explicitly excludes mortgage principal payments. For co-op owners this applies in two ways. First, if the association carries an underlying building mortgage, your proportionate share of the interest paid by the association during the reporting period is deductible. Second, if you carry a personal mortgage on your shares, only the interest portion of your payments during the reporting period is deductible — not the principal.
Critical warning on double-counting. Your monthly carrying charge already includes your proportionate share of the building's mortgage interest and property taxes. If you include your full carrying charge as an operating expense and then also separately add your proportionate share of the association's mortgage interest, you will be counting that interest twice. In most cases, including your full carrying charge is the simpler and more complete approach, provided you do not then add mortgage interest or property taxes as separate line items. If your carrying charge breakdown is unclear, ask your management company for an itemized statement before completing this section.
What DC RAD does not allow as operating expenses:
- Mortgage principal payments
- Depreciation expenses
- Membership fees or political contributions
- Legal fees for defending against housing regulation violations
- Maintenance costs reimbursed by insurance, a tenant, or court order
- Management fees exceeding 6% of maximum rental income
- Vacancy losses exceeding 6% of maximum rental income
- Expenses paid directly by the tenant
Total Operating Costs = Sum of all allowable expenses above
Step 6: Calculate Net Income
Formula: Gross Income − Total Operating Costs = Net Income
Step 7: Calculate Equity
This step uses the outstanding mortgage balance — not the interest paid. This is an important distinction from Step 5, where you used interest only.
Your equity is your assessed share minus the total of all encumbrances on the unit. For co-op owners, encumbrances typically come from two sources that must be calculated and combined:
Building mortgage share: Outstanding building mortgage balance × Ownership percentage = Your share of building mortgage
Personal mortgage balance: The full outstanding principal balance of any personal mortgage you carry on the unit.
Total encumbrances = Building mortgage share + Personal mortgage balance
Formula: Assessed Share − Total Encumbrances = Equity
Example:
- Assessed share: $71,756.36
- Building mortgage share: $18,000.00 (hypothetical)
- Personal mortgage balance: $21,866.00
- Total encumbrances: $39,866.00
- Equity: $71,756.36 − $39,866.00 = $31,890.36
If the building carries no mortgage, the building mortgage share is zero. Include only your personal mortgage balance if applicable.
Step 8: Calculate the Rate of Return
Formula: (Net Income ÷ Equity) × 100 = Rate of Return %
Example: ($9,345 ÷ $49,890.36) × 100 = 18.73%
Important: Why Your Rate of Return May Look Unusually High
If your rate of return comes out higher than you expected — sometimes dramatically higher — this is common for co-op owners and here is why.
DC RAD's formula uses the city's assessed value of your proportionate share of the building as the basis for the equity calculation. For a standard rental property, that assessed value is reasonably close to market value. For a co-op, the city assesses the entire building as a single parcel and cannot break it down by unit. Your share of that building assessment will almost always be significantly lower than what your unit is actually worth on the open market.
The result is an equity figure that is artificially low, which in turn makes the rate of return look artificially high. This is not a math error — it is a structural limitation of how DC taxes co-op buildings, and it affects every co-op owner who goes through this calculation.
Why this matters to you as a landlord. DC rent control allows you to petition for a hardship rent increase if your rate of return falls below a certain threshold. A rate of return that looks high on paper — even if it does not reflect the economic reality of your investment — will make it very difficult to claim hardship if you ever need to justify a larger rent increase in the future. This is worth keeping in mind as you manage rents over time. If this is a concern, consult with an attorney familiar with DC rent control law before making decisions about future rent increases.
Quick Reference: What to Request from Your Co-op Association
When you contact your management company, ask for the following:
- Total number of shares issued for the building
- Your share count (if not already on your proprietary lease or certificate)
- Your ownership percentage (if the association has it calculated)
- The outstanding balance of any underlying or building-level mortgage
- The total mortgage interest paid by the association during your reporting period
- Confirmation of which DC tax parcel corresponds to your building (critical in multi-building complexes)
- A breakdown of what your monthly carrying charge covers
Sample request you can send to your management company:
"I am completing the DC Rent Registry Rate of Return worksheet for my unit and need the following information: the total number of shares issued for the building, the outstanding balance of any underlying building mortgage, the total mortgage interest paid by the association for the period of [start date] through [end date], and a breakdown of what my monthly carrying charge covers. Please also confirm which DC tax parcel number corresponds to my building. Thank you."
This article applies to DC Rent Registry filings only. Tax and legal questions about co-op ownership should be directed to your attorney or accountant.