Almost every Onora listing publishes three return figures on the same card: gross yield, net yield, cap rate. Three different numbers for the same property, often within a few percentage points of each other.
If you're new to real estate as an asset class, the three can blur together. Here's what each actually means and what to do with it.
Gross yield
Definition: annual rent ÷ asking price.
A property listed at €500,000 that rents for €30,000 per year has a 6% gross yield. Nothing complicated.
Gross yield is the fastest way to filter listings against each other. It ignores costs entirely, which makes it a useful coarse filter — if the gross yield is below the local risk-free rate, the property generally doesn't survive any further analysis. If it's well above, you ask what the seller knows that the market doesn't.
What gross yield doesn't tell you: anything about actual returns. A property with a 7% gross yield in a country where service charges and property tax eat 35% of rent is worse than a 5% yield where running costs are 10%. Use gross yield as a sort key, not as a decision.
Net yield
Definition: (annual rent − running costs) ÷ asking price.
This is gross yield with the documented operating costs deducted: service charges, insurance, management fees, vacancy provision, local property tax. It does not include financing costs (mortgage interest), capital expenditure (roof, boiler, kitchen replacement), or transaction costs (notary, broker, transfer tax at purchase).