Rental property investing in Kentucky: cash flow, taxes, and what to expect
A practical breakdown of buy-and-hold rentals in Kentucky - typical price points in Louisville, Lexington, property tax reality, eviction speed, and the numbers that actually matter for cash flow.
The Kentucky setup, at a glance
Kentucky sits at roughly 0.83% effective property tax, which matters more than most new investors realize. On a $220k-$310k Louisville property, that's about $1,826/year in taxes alone - call it $152/month before you've paid anything else. Run the rental cash flow calculator with that line item baked in or your projection will look better than reality.
Eviction stance here is landlord. Landlord-friendly. 7-day notice (URLTA jurisdictions). Hearing in 10-14 days. That timeline directly affects your vacancy assumption: in landlord-friendly states like Kentucky, you can underwrite 5-7% vacancy on B-class properties; in slower states you'd want 8-10%.
Where the math actually pencils
Louisville - $220k-$310k for typical SFR, $1,300-$1,750/mo for 2-3BR rents. bourbon + logistics + UPS hub.
Lexington - $260k-$350k for typical SFR, $1,400-$1,850/mo for 2-3BR rents. horse country + university, A/B class focus.
The 1% rule (monthly rent >= 1% of purchase) is a smoke test only, but it filters fast: a $260k-$350k property in Lexington renting at the high end (1,850/mo) clears 0.8-0.9% in most cases, so you're already in the "needs the rest of the math to be tight" zone before vacancy + capex + management.
Kentucky-specific things that bite
URLTA (Uniform Residential Landlord-Tenant Act) only adopted in some KY counties - check the local court rules.
A few cash-flow-killer line items that catch out-of-state buyers in Kentucky:
- Property tax escrow. Lower than the national 1% average, but the homestead exemption you'd get as an owner-occupant doesn't apply to rentals.
- Insurance. Standard hazard policies are still reasonable here, but ask about wind/hail riders depending on the specific zip.
- PM costs. 8-10% of collected rent is typical. On a $1400/mo property that's $126-140/mo - works out to about a month of vacancy each year.
What "good enough" looks like in Kentucky
For a stabilized buy-and-hold in Kentucky, the rule-of-thumb deal targets most investors I see are:
- Cap rate: 6%+ on the actual NOI (not the broker's pro forma). Below 5% and you're paying for appreciation, which is fine if that's your thesis.
- Cash-on-cash: 8-10% minimum at year 1 with 20-25% down. 12%+ is solid for the work.
- DSCR: 1.25+ if you're using a DSCR loan. Lenders increasingly want 1.2 as a floor, 1.25 to clear comfortably.
- Reserves: 6 months of PITI. Even with Kentucky's fast eviction, you'll burn 1-2 months on turnover + repairs in a bad year.
The play that works here
Kentucky has tilted toward appreciation rather than cash flow in most major metros. Cash-flow seekers usually need to look at secondary cities or accept lower CoC for the appreciation thesis.
Run your specific deal through the rental calculator with the state's effective tax rate (0.83%), realistic Kentucky insurance quotes, and 8-10% PM. If it still pencils after that, you've got a deal.