Ask ten experienced flippers how they price a deal and you'll get one answer: they work backwards from the after-repair value. The formula is called MAO — Maximum Allowable Offer — and it's the single most important number in any fix-and-flip transaction.

Getting MAO wrong is how new investors lose money on their first flip. Getting it right is how experienced investors hit 20-25% gross margins on every deal. Here's exactly how it works, and why the number you can pay for a house has almost nothing to do with the listing price.

The MAO Formula, Start to Finish

The standard industry formula is:

MAO = (ARV × 0.70) − Rehab Costs

Translated: your maximum allowable offer is 70% of the after-repair value, minus whatever you plan to spend on the rehab. The 70% figure is not arbitrary — it's designed to absorb the three categories of cost that eat into a flip's margin: acquisition costs, holding costs, and profit.

Here's a quick worked example. You're looking at a Baltimore row home in Patterson Park that will sell for $385,000 once rehabbed, and you estimate the rehab at $75,000.

That's your MAO. You should not pay a dollar more than $194,500 for this property. Every dollar above MAO comes directly out of your profit.

Why 70%? Unpacking What That Covers

The 30% discount off ARV is doing real work. It needs to cover:

  1. Acquisition costs (3-4% of purchase): title, lender points, inspection, appraisal, closing costs.
  2. Holding costs (4-6% of ARV): interest on your bridge loan, property taxes, insurance, utilities for 4-8 months of construction and sale.
  3. Selling costs (7-8% of ARV): agent commissions (5-6%), seller concessions, transfer taxes.
  4. Profit (15%+ of ARV): the reason you're doing this.

Add those together and you're at roughly 30%. Cut the discount too thin and you're working for free. Most experienced flippers in competitive markets use 72-75%; in slower or riskier markets, they drop to 65% or lower.

The Three Inputs That Make or Break Your MAO

1. ARV — Don't Guess It, Comp It

Your ARV has to be defensible. Pull 3-5 sold comparable properties within the last 90 days, within a half-mile, similar square footage and finish level. Then adjust for differences (bed/bath count, garage, lot size, finished basement). If your rehab is going to produce a kitchen with quartz counters and LVP, don't compare to houses with builder-grade laminate.

Most first-time flippers overestimate ARV by 5-10%. That alone can wipe out half your profit. When in doubt, use the lower comp.

2. Rehab Budget — Add Contingency

If your contractor says $60,000, budget $72,000. Unknown conditions (bad framing, cast iron pipes, knob-and-tube wiring, mold) routinely add 15-20% to the scope on older properties. Veteran investors keep 10-15% contingency in their rehab number, not a separate line item.

Pro Tip

Pimlico Capital's bridge loans fund up to 100% of rehab in draws against an approved scope of work. That means your cash exposure stays tied to purchase + closing costs, not the rehab. It's one of the reasons our borrowers can scale from one flip to three or four simultaneously.

3. Discount Multiplier — Adjust for Market Conditions

The 70% rule is a starting point, not gospel. Adjust it based on:

A Harder Example: When MAO Kills a Deal

Here's a deal we saw last month. A borrower was excited about a house listed at $265,000 with a comp-pulled ARV of $395,000 and an estimated rehab of $85,000.

The seller was asking $265,000 — that's $73,500 over MAO. If the borrower paid asking, they'd be working on thin-to-negative margin after a small budget overrun. The deal isn't a deal. They walked. Three weeks later the same property closed at $198,000 — right at MAO — and they bought it.

That's the discipline MAO creates. You stop chasing deals and start underwriting them.

When to Deviate from the 70% Rule

There are legitimate reasons to go higher than 70%, but all of them involve reducing one of the cost categories you're supposed to cover:

What you should not do is deviate from 70% because "this one's going to be special." Every flipper who loses money thought their deal was special.

Putting It to Work

Every flipper we've financed who's scaled past five deals a year uses MAO as a hard ceiling. They run it before they ever walk the property, update it after the inspection, and hold the line in negotiations.

Memorize the formula: MAO = (ARV × 0.70) − Rehab. Run it on every deal you see. If the seller won't meet you there, move on. There's always another house.

Run Your Numbers First

Not sure how much you'll qualify for? Try our Deal Sizer → to size your max loan, cash-to-close, and projected ROI before you make an offer.

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