Rent after increase

Rent After Increase Calculator

Calculate new rent after a percentage or fixed increase. The selected billing period controls the main result.

Enter the rent amount before the increase.

Enter the increase as a percent, such as 5 or 2.5.

Monthly rent after increase
$2,100.00

Based on monthly rent and the selected increase.

Hourly rent
$2.88
Daily rent
$69.04
Weekly rent
$483.29
Every 2 weeks rent
$966.58
Every 4 weeks rent
$1,933.15
Annual rent
$25,200.00
Increase summary
Estimated percent change
4.99%
Change per selected period
$100.00
Annual increase
$1,200.00
Annual totals
Current annual rent: $24,000.00
New annual rent: $25,200.00
Difference: $1,200.00
Monthly vs 4-week before and after
Current · monthly
$2,000.00
Current · 4-week
$1,841.10
New · monthly
$2,100.00
New · 4-week
$1,933.15

4-week = 28 days. Average month = 30.42 days (365 ÷ 12).

Full breakdown across periods

This table converts the current rent and new rent into common billing periods.

PeriodCurrentNewDifference
Hourly$2.74$2.88$0.14
Daily$65.75$69.04$3.29
Weekly$460.27$483.29$23.01
Every 2 weeks$920.55$966.58$46.03
Every 4 weeks (28 days)$1,841.10$1,933.15$92.05
Monthly$2,000.00$2,100.00$100.00
Annual$24,000.00$25,200.00$1,200.00

Calculations preserve precision internally, while displayed money values are rounded to cents.

How this calculator worksRent after increase

Use a known rent increase to calculate the new rent after one change. This is helpful when you have the current rent and either a fixed dollar increase or a percentage increase.

What this calculation clarifies

  1. 1
    Percent and fixed increases behave differently

    A percentage increase scales with the current rent. A fixed increase adds the same dollar amount. Over multiple years, percentage increases can compound.

  2. 2
    Annual impact is often clearer than monthly change

    A small monthly increase can become a larger yearly cost. Annual impact helps you compare renewing, moving, or negotiating.

  3. 3
    Rules and caps are outside the math

    Local rent rules, notice periods, CPI caps, lease terms, and exemptions can matter. The calculator gives the math, not legal permission.

Worked examples

$1,538 with a 7.5% increase

$1,538 increased by 7.5% becomes $1,653.35. The monthly change is $115.35, and the annualized change is $1,384.20.

$800 rent with a $70 increase

$800 plus $70 becomes $870. Over a year, that fixed increase adds $840 before any later changes.

Checking a projection

If rent rises by the same dollar amount each year, the pattern is linear. If it rises by a percent each year, the pattern compounds and later years increase more.

Useful context

  • Use this for rent increase calculator, rent increase percentage calculator, annual rent increase calculator, and calculating rent increase searches when they match the page.
  • If you only know the old and new rent, use the percentage calculator. If you know the percentage and need the new rent, use rent after increase.

When rent increase context helps

  • Checking a renewal notice before responding.
  • Comparing the new rent with your affordability limit.
  • Understanding whether a fixed increase or percent increase changes the yearly budget more.

Check before relying on it

  • Local law and lease terms can control whether an increase is allowed. This page only calculates the numbers.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you calculate rent after an increase?
Enter the current rent, billing period, and increase. The calculator applies the increase to that billing period, then shows the new rent and converts it into other common periods.
What does the billing period apply to?
The billing period applies to the current rent and, in fixed amount mode, to the increase amount. It also controls the large result shown at the top.
What formula does the percent rent increase calculation use?
For percent mode, the formula is new rent = current rent × (1 + increase percent ÷ 100). The calculator also converts the result into other periods.
What formula does the fixed amount increase calculation use?
For fixed amount mode, the formula is new rent = current rent + increase amount for the selected billing period.
Why are monthly and every 4 weeks shown separately?
Every 4 weeks is 28 days. An average month is about 30.42 days. Showing both avoids treating two different billing periods as the same.
Does this include utilities, fees, taxes, or rent-control rules?
No. It compares rent amounts only. Legal limits, utilities, fees, taxes, deposits, and lease-specific rules are not included.
Will this match the first payment after an increase takes effect?
Not always. A first payment can be affected by proration, mid-cycle effective dates, or lease terms. This calculator shows full-period estimates.