Wyoming Rental Cash-Flow Calculator

Project monthly cash flow, DSCR, cap rate, and year-one cash-on-cash return for any Wyoming rental deal using Wyoming-specific property taxes, insurance, and foreclosure data.

Preliminary screening tool only.Default values are illustrative examples — not market offers. Wyoming costs shown use state-level averages that vary by county, property, and provider. Verify every number with local professionals before committing capital. This is not investment advice.

How We Calculate Wyoming Rental Costs

Property Taxes: Wyoming's average effective property tax rate is 0.58%. For rental underwriting, taxes are calculated on the purchase price you enter — annualized, then divided into monthly PITI. Actual rates vary by county — verify with your county assessor.

Homeowners Insurance: Insurance is computed via a non-linear piecewise interpolation model scaled by Wyoming's risk multiplier. For a $320,000 property (the Wyoming median), the estimated annual premium is $1,374. Investment / landlord-dwelling policies typically cost 15–25% more than standard homeowner policies — get actual quotes for your specific property before underwriting.

Foreclosure Timeline: The average foreclosure process in Wyoming takes approximately 165 days (6 months), using non-judicialproceedings (ATTOM 2025 data). A longer timeline widens the window a non-performing tenant or defaulting borrower can occupy the property without paying — a structural holding-cost exposure for landlords in slow-timeline states.

Rent Control & Local Ordinances: Rent control rules vary by city, county, and sometimes by building age within Wyoming. The analyzer uses state-level averages; see the Wyoming Landlord-Tenant Law section below for the specific restrictions that affect rent growth, notice periods, and eviction timelines in your target market.

Compare Wyoming with Similar Rental Markets

These states share a similar investor risk profile to Wyomingbased on foreclosure timeline, property tax, transfer tax, and attorney-state status. Click through to run your deal under each market's specific cost structure.

Wyoming Rental Cash-Flow FAQs

Wyoming Foreclosure Process

Foreclosure Type
Both available. Non-judicial (deed of trust/trustee's sale) is most common and dominant.
Deficiency Judgments
Allowed after non-judicial foreclosure. Lender must file a separate action within 3 months of the foreclosure sale.
Right of Redemption
3-month right of redemption after non-judicial foreclosure sale; 12 months after judicial foreclosure. The 3-month period after non-judicial sale is relatively short and manageable for investors.
Typical Timeline
Non-judicial: approximately 2–3 months from notice to sale — one of the fastest foreclosure timelines in the country. Wyoming requires only a 25-day notice period after the initial default notice.

Legal and regulatory details can change. Verify current requirements with a local real estate attorney before relying on this information for investment decisions.

Wyoming Landlord-Tenant Law

Rent Control
None. Wyoming has no rent control and no preemption statute is needed. No Wyoming municipality has enacted or seriously considered it.
Security Deposit
No statutory maximum. Must be returned within 30 days of lease end (15 days if no deductions and tenant provides forwarding address) with itemized written statement of any deductions.
Eviction Process
Judicial only (Forcible Entry and Detainer in Circuit Court). Wyoming is very landlord-friendly — among the most landlord-favorable states in the country. Typical timeline from 3-day notice to writ of restitution: 2–4 weeks in most counties. Wyoming's low population and court volume means cases move quickly.
Notice Periods
3-day pay-or-quit for non-payment; 3-day cure-or-quit for lease violations; month-to-month termination requires notice per lease terms (Wyoming statute does not specify a minimum period for month-to-month termination by the landlord — typically 30 days by contract). Wyoming's landlord-tenant statute is sparse compared to most states — many issues default to lease terms and common law.
Duty to Mitigate
Wyoming does not have a clear statutory duty to mitigate for landlords. Wyoming's landlord-tenant law is minimal and many provisions default to common law.

Legal and regulatory details can change. Verify current requirements with a local real estate attorney before relying on this information for investment decisions.

WyomingTax & Insurance Climate for Rental Investors

Homestead Exemption (Investors)
Wyoming's homestead exemption protects up to $20,000 in primary residence equity from creditors. Does not reduce property taxes. Wyoming has no state income tax, no state corporate income tax, no inheritance or estate tax — this combination is unique in the U.S. and makes Wyoming highly favorable for long-term hold investors and estate planning. Property taxes are very low — typically 0.5%–0.7% effective rate on residential investment property.
Reassessment at Purchase
No automatic Prop 13-style reset. Wyoming assesses annually at market value for all property classes. In practice, residential assessments in resort markets (Jackson Hole) track market values closely; rural and energy-county assessments are more variable.
Investor-Specific Taxes
Wyoming has no state income tax, no inheritance tax, no corporate income tax, and no transfer tax on real estate — this combination is unique in the U.S. Standard county recording fees are minimal.
Insurance Considerations
Wildfire risk in forested areas of the western slope and areas adjacent to national forests (Teton, Shoshone). Wind/hail risk statewide — Wyoming is extremely windy and hailstorms are common and can be severe. Earthquake risk in the Yellowstone caldera region (Teton County, Park County) — standard policies exclude earthquake; separate coverage advisable near the Yellowstone volcanic system. Extreme cold and wind create significant property maintenance costs statewide. Jackson Hole properties face high construction costs making replacement cost coverage expensive.
Rental Insurance Requirements
No state requirement for rental insurance.

Wyoming Investor Regulatory Environment

Business License / Rental Registration
No statewide requirement and essentially no significant local rental registration requirements in most Wyoming municipalities — one of the least regulated states for landlords in the country. Teton County (Jackson) has been considering STR and rental registration requirements given housing affordability pressure.
LLC Ownership
No restrictions. Wyoming is one of the most popular states in the country for LLC formation due to strong asset protection laws, charging order protections, anonymous LLC provisions, and no state income tax. Wyoming LLCs are widely used by out-of-state investors for holding properties in other states.
Short-Term Rental (STR) Restrictions
No statewide restrictions. Teton County/Town of Jackson has some of the most active STR regulatory discussions in the Mountain West due to extreme housing affordability pressure. Jackson/Teton County STR regulations are actively evolving and are the single most important regulatory risk for investors targeting that market. Cody, Thermopolis, and other tourism towns have limited but emerging STR frameworks.
Disclosure Requirements
Wyoming Seller's Real Property Disclosure Act requires sellers to disclose known material defects; the form is less detailed than many other states but the duty to disclose known conditions applies. Lead paint (federal). No specific state mold or radon statute. Specific mineral rights disclosure is important in Wyoming — sellers must disclose whether mineral rights are severed from surface rights (very common in Wyoming). Investors should always confirm surface vs. mineral estate ownership.
Wholesaling
Wyoming Real Estate Commission applies standard license law. Given Wyoming's small transaction volume, formal enforcement of wholesaling-specific activities has been limited.

Legal and regulatory details can change. Verify current requirements with a local real estate attorney before relying on this information for investment decisions.

Wyoming Rental Market Overview

Top Investor-Friendly Markets
Cheyenne/Laramie County (state capital, F.E. Warren AFB, most affordable and liquid Wyoming market, cash flow + hybrid). Casper/Natrona County (energy economy, most affordable major WY city, cash flow). Jackson/Teton County (premier resort/luxury market — one of the highest home prices in the country, STR/appreciation but increasingly regulated and astronomically priced). Gillette/Campbell County (coal/energy economy — highly volatile, avoid unless specifically underwriting energy cycle risk). Laramie/Albany County (University of Wyoming anchor, most affordable stable cash flow market). Cody/Park County (tourism — Yellowstone gateway, growing STR market, appreciation potential).
Market Characterization
Wyoming is a bifurcated market — Jackson/Teton County is a world-class luxury/resort/appreciation market entirely in its own category (median home prices among the highest in the U.S.); everywhere else is a cash flow market with low prices, low taxes, and low appreciation history. Cheyenne and Casper are the most accessible and liquid markets for traditional buy-and-hold investors.
Notable Trends
Wyoming's energy economy (coal, oil, natural gas) creates significant boom/bust cycles in Gillette, Rock Springs, and Riverton. Jackson Hole has become one of the most expensive real estate markets in the country but workforce housing crisis is severe and STR regulations are tightening. Cheyenne benefits from Denver proximity (90 miles), F.E. Warren AFB, and data center development (Microsoft and other hyperscalers). Wyoming's no-income-tax, no-transfer-tax, no-inheritance-tax trifecta makes it one of the most compelling states for long-term real estate holding and estate planning. Overall population is small (~580,000 statewide) which limits market liquidity.

Related REI Analyzers