Local market • Pittsburgh, PA

House Flipping Calculator for Pittsburgh, PA

Stable values, low entry, strong universities — popular among new flippers.

Worked example: the 70% rule in Pittsburgh

With a median home price around $230,000 in Pittsburgh, a flipper using a 70% of ARV rule would target a maximum offer near $133,400 on a property worth $230,000 after repairs with roughly $27,600 of rehab.

After-repair value (ARV)$230,000
Estimated rehab (≈12% of ARV)$27,600
70% of ARV$161,000
Maximum allowable offer (MAO)$133,400

These are illustrative figures. Run the actual numbers — comps, true rehab scope, holding costs, financing — in the FlipOS deal analyzer for an accurate MAO.

A more accurate MAO: work backward from your costs

The percentage rule is just a shortcut for the real formula — subtract every cost and your target profit from the ARV:

MAO = ARV − rehab − closing − holding − selling − target profit

After-repair value (ARV)$230,000
Rehab (≈12% of ARV)$27,600
Buy / closing costs (≈2%)$4,600
Holding costs (≈3%)$6,900
Selling costs (≈6.5%)$14,950
Target profit (≈19% of ARV)$42,550
Maximum allowable offer (MAO)$133,400

Notice this lands on the same $133,400 as the 70% rule above — the rule just bakes these costs into one number. The trade-off it hides: a higher ARV percentage means a thinner profit margin (19% here), which is exactly why standard markets can hold the line at 70%. Always confirm rehab, holding, and selling costs for the specific deal.

What flippers should know about Pittsburgh

Stable values, low entry, strong universities — popular among new flippers. As with any market, the headline median price masks wide variation block-to-block. Pull comps inside a one-mile radius (or tighter in urban submarkets), and confirm rehab costs with at least two local contractors before committing.

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