Flipping houses in Las Vegas is still a real business in 2026 — but it is a business of discipline, not a get-rich-quick scheme, and the buyers who lose money are almost always the ones who skipped the math. The spread is there: investor-grade fixers list around $281,000 while the metro's turnkey median sits near $472,000, and renovated homes in the same neighborhoods sell fast — a median of just 11 days on market for recently-sold fixers, at about $197 per square foot. But between that entry price and that exit price sits a renovation budget, months of holding costs, hard-money interest, selling costs, and taxes that eat the difference if you are careless. Get the numbers right and a Las Vegas flip nets tens of thousands; get them wrong and the "deal" becomes a lesson.
This is the playbook. It walks through the 70% rule that keeps investors from overpaying, a real Las Vegas flip broken down line by line, where the deals actually hide by ZIP code, how to finance a flip when banks will not, the Clark County permits and Nevada licensing rules, the taxes that surprise first-timers, and the risks that wipe out margin. It is grounded in live Greater Las Vegas MLS data and the roughly 9,600 transactions our team has closed across the valley. When you are ready to source deals, our Las Vegas fixer-upper listings page is where the flip candidates surface; this is how you underwrite one so it actually profits.
To flip a house in Las Vegas profitably, buy at or below 70% of after-repair value minus your renovation budget, finance with hard money or cash for speed, renovate to the neighborhood standard, and sell fast into the median 11-day resale window. Investor fixers list near $281,000 versus a $472,000 turnkey median, so the spread exists — but interest, holding, selling costs, and taxes decide the profit. Discipline on the buy price separates winners from money pits.
- The 70% rule caps your buy price at 70% of after-repair value minus repairs — the guardrail against overpaying.
- Investor fixers list near $281,000 versus a $472,000 Las Vegas turnkey median — the raw spread a flip captures.
- Recently-sold fixers moved in a median 11 days at about $197/sqft, so a good renovated flip sells fast.
- Hard money funds most flips at roughly 10% plus points — fast capital, but a real cost you must underwrite.
- Value ZIPs like 89101, 89107, 89108, and 89110 hold the lowest entry prices for flip candidates.
Is Flipping Houses in Las Vegas Still Profitable in 2026?
Yes — but the easy money is gone, and 2026 rewards precision over volume. The Las Vegas market gives flippers three things they need: a genuine spread between distressed entry prices and turnkey resale, fast absorption of well-renovated homes, and a steady supply of dated 1970s–1990s housing in the established core. According to Greater Las Vegas MLS data, investor-special listings enter around $281,000 while the metro median asks about $472,000, and recently-sold fixers cleared in a median 11 days — evidence that renovated product still sells quickly.
That supply of dated stock is real and durable. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, a large share of the valley's core housing was built between the 1970s and the 1990s — homes now 30 to 50 years old, with original kitchens, baths, and systems that renovate into modern resale product. That aging inventory in the central and eastern valley is the raw material every Las Vegas flip depends on, and it is not running out. It is why the fix-and-flip model has worked here for decades and still works for investors who buy right, even as the wider market cooled from its pandemic-era frenzy. The same dated homes that frustrate retail buyers are exactly what a disciplined flipper wants — condition problems are opportunities when you have priced them correctly.
What changed is the cushion. When prices rose 15% a year, a sloppy flip got bailed out by appreciation. In a flatter 2026 market, the margin has to come from buying right and renovating efficiently, not from the market rescuing a bad buy. That means the 70% rule is not optional, your repair budget has to be real, and your holding time has to be short. The flippers making money today are the ones treating it like the tight-margin business it is — underwriting every deal to the dollar before they make an offer, the same way they would browse the current fixer inventory with a calculator open.

How Does the 70% Rule Work for Las Vegas Flips?
The 70% rule is the single most important guardrail in flipping, and it is simple: never pay more than 70% of the after-repair value (ARV) minus your repair costs. The 30% you hold back is not profit — it absorbs holding costs, financing, selling costs, and your margin. Skip it and the deal has no room to survive a surprise.
| Input | Value | How it is set |
|---|---|---|
| After-repair value (ARV) | $475,000 | Renovated comparable sales in the same neighborhood |
| Estimated repairs | $75,000 | Detailed contractor scope, not a guess |
| ARV × 70% | $332,500 | The ceiling before repairs |
| Maximum allowable offer | $257,500 | $332,500 minus $75,000 repairs |
In this example, the most you should pay for the home is $257,500. Offer more and you are eating into the 30% buffer that is supposed to cover your costs and pay you. The ARV is the number people get wrong most often — it must come from renovated comparable sales within roughly a mile and the last few months, not from optimistic guesses or the Zestimate-style automated values that ignore condition. Anchor the ARV conservatively, price the repairs from a real contractor walk-through, and the 70% rule protects you from the mistake that kills most first flips: overpaying on the buy.
How Do You Estimate ARV Accurately in Las Vegas?
If the 70% rule is the guardrail, the after-repair value is the road it sits on — and a wrong ARV sends the whole deal off a cliff. ARV is what your renovated home will actually sell for, and the only reliable way to set it is with recently-sold, fully-renovated comparable homes in the same pocket of the valley. Pull three to five sold comps within roughly a mile, closed in the last three to six months, matched on square footage, bedroom and bath count, lot, and — critically — finish level. A flipped, updated home is your comp; a tired original-condition sale is not, because you are pricing the finished product, not the starting point.
Las Vegas makes this both easier and trickier than many markets. Easier, because the valley's tract-heavy neighborhoods produce lots of near-identical floor plans, so true apples-to-apples comps exist. Trickier, because micro-location swings value hard — a home backing the 215 beltway, sitting under a flight path, or two streets outside a better school zone can trade tens of thousands below an otherwise identical house. Automated values (the Zestimate-style estimates) miss all of that; they average condition and ignore the exact block. Lean on a local agent who can pull the real sold comps and adjust for the things a computer cannot see. On a flip, being $20,000 too optimistic on ARV turns an $87,000 profit into a break-even, so this is not a number to eyeball. Our team runs renovated comps for investor clients before they ever write an offer, and it is the single most valuable input we provide — more than finding the deal, it is knowing what the deal is worth finished. If you want a second read on a target property, contact us and we will pull the comps with you.
What Does a Real Las Vegas Flip Look Like by the Numbers?
The 70% rule sets the buy; a full profit-and-loss shows whether the deal actually pays. Here is the same deal carried all the way through to net profit.
| Line item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $257,500 |
| Renovation budget | $75,000 |
| Hard-money interest + points (6 months) | $21,000 |
| Holding costs (taxes, insurance, utilities) | $6,000 |
| Selling costs (commission, closing) | $28,500 |
| Total all-in cost | $388,000 |
| Sale price (ARV) | $475,000 |
| Estimated net profit | $87,000 |
That roughly $87,000 net — before income taxes — is a healthy Las Vegas flip, and it exists only because the buy honored the 70% rule. Notice how much the non-renovation costs add up: over $55,000 in financing, holding, and selling costs on a single deal. First-time flippers routinely forget these and treat the gap between purchase-plus-repairs and sale price as profit, then wonder where the money went. The discipline is to underwrite every one of those lines before you buy, and to leave yourself a repair contingency of 10–20% because older Las Vegas homes hide surprises behind the drywall.

Where Do You Find Flip Deals in Las Vegas?
Flip candidates concentrate where the housing is older and the entry prices are lowest — the established central and eastern valley, not the newer master plans. According to Greater Las Vegas MLS data, the lowest-entry ZIP codes for fixer and investor-special listings cluster in the urban core.
| ZIP | Area | Typical fixer entry |
|---|---|---|
| 89101 | Downtown / East Las Vegas | $207,500 |
| 89107 | Charleston Heights | $195,000 |
| 89108 | Northwest / Vegas Heights | $199,900 |
| 89110 | Sunrise Manor | $212,450 |
| 89121 | Winterwood / Paradise | $254,950 |
Beyond the MLS, deals come from wholesalers, auctions, probate and estate situations, tired landlords, and driving-for-dollars in these older ZIPs. You can also filter the full valley search yourself for older, lower-priced homes as a starting screen. But the MLS remains the most reliable, transparent source, which is why our team screens the fixer and investor-special listings across Las Vegas, Henderson, and North Las Vegas for investor clients. Even the pricier submarkets like Henderson have older Green Valley pockets where a flip can pencil. The best deals move in days, so having an agent who can flag them the moment they list — and run the 70% math with you on the spot — is a genuine edge.
How Do You Finance a Las Vegas Flip?
Traditional mortgages do not work for flips — they are slow, they lend against current condition, and they are built for owner-occupants. Flippers use faster capital.
| Source | Typical terms | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Hard money | ~10–12% + 1–3 points, 6–12 months | Most flips — fast, asset-based, closes in days |
| Private money | Negotiated (often 8–12%) | Investors with a lender relationship |
| Cash | None | Strongest offers, fastest close, no interest drag |
| HELOC / equity | Bank rates | Funding part of the deal from another property |
Hard money is the workhorse: an asset-based lender funds most of the purchase and often the renovation in staged draws, closes in days, and charges roughly 10–12% plus a few points for the speed. That interest is a real cost — about $21,000 in our example — but it lets you compete with cash offers and move fast on a good deal. Cash is strongest of all when you have it, eliminating the interest drag and making your offer nearly impossible for a seller to refuse. Whatever you use, the financing cost belongs in your underwriting before you buy, not as a surprise at the closing table.
How Much Should You Budget for a Las Vegas Renovation?
Your repair number drives the whole deal, so build it from a real scope, not a wish. A cosmetic flip — paint, flooring, fixtures, a light kitchen and bath refresh — often runs $40,000–$70,000 on a typical Las Vegas single-story. A moderate rehab adding HVAC, roof, windows, and full kitchen and baths lands $75,000–$130,000. A full gut with layout changes or foundation work exceeds $150,000. Las Vegas specifics matter: desert HVAC systems are non-negotiable and expensive, older homes may need electrical panel upgrades, and pools — common in the valley — add resurfacing and equipment costs if the home has one.
Always carry a 10–20% contingency. Older Las Vegas homes hide the expensive surprises — dated wiring, failed sewer lines, a roof worse than it looked — behind finished walls, and the contingency is what keeps one surprise from erasing your margin. Renovate to the neighborhood's standard, not above it: granite-and-quartz finishes that fit a $475,000 comp make sense, but over-improving a home beyond what the ZIP supports is money you will not get back at resale.

What Permits and Rules Apply to Flipping in Clark County?
This is where amateurs get burned. According to Clark County's Department of Building and Fire Prevention, most structural, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and roofing work requires permits, and unpermitted work discovered at resale can kill a sale or force expensive rework. Pull the permits — the inspection trail actually protects your resale, because a buyer's agent and appraiser can see the work was done to code.
Just as important: according to Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 624 and the Nevada State Contractors Board, work over $1,000 (including labor and materials) generally must be performed by a licensed contractor. A flipper acting as an unlicensed general contractor on a home they do not occupy is taking on real legal and liability exposure. Use licensed trades, pull the permits, and keep the paperwork — it is cheaper than the alternative, and it makes your flip a clean, financeable home at resale rather than a disclosure problem.
How Long Does a Las Vegas Flip Take?
Speed is profit, because every extra month is more interest and holding cost. A well-run Las Vegas flip follows a tight calendar.
| Phase | Typical duration |
|---|---|
| Find + underwrite + close | 2–6 weeks |
| Renovation | 6–12 weeks |
| List, sell, close | 3–6 weeks (median 11 days to contract on a good renovated home) |
| Total cycle | ~4–6 months |
Most Las Vegas flips run four to six months end to end. The renovation is where timelines slip — permit delays, contractor scheduling, and surprise repairs — so a realistic schedule and a contractor who actually shows up are worth more than a slightly lower bid. Because recently-sold fixers cleared in a median 11 days, the sell phase is usually the fastest part if the renovation matches the neighborhood and the price is right.
What Taxes Do You Pay on a Flip?
This surprises first-timers and it matters a lot. According to the IRS, a house you buy, renovate, and sell within a year is taxed as a short-term capital gain at ordinary income rates — not the lower long-term capital-gains rate that applies after a year of ownership. Worse, an investor who flips repeatedly can be classified as a dealer, in which case profits are ordinary income subject to self-employment tax as well. Nevada's lack of a state income tax helps — you avoid a state tax bite that a California flipper would owe — but the federal treatment is the one to plan for.
The practical implication: your $87,000 pre-tax profit is not your take-home. Model the tax before you buy, keep meticulous records of every cost (they raise your basis and lower the gain), and talk to a CPA about entity structure and, for longer holds, whether a 1031 exchange fits your strategy. Taxes do not have to ruin a flip, but ignoring them turns a good deal into a smaller one than you expected.

What Are the Biggest Risks of Flipping in Las Vegas?
Every risk in flipping traces back to a number you got wrong. Overpaying on the buy is the biggest — it has no cure, because you cannot renovate your way out of paying too much. Underestimating repairs is second; the surprise behind the wall is why the contingency exists. Holding too long bleeds interest and holding costs and can catch a softening market. Over-improving puts money into finishes the ZIP will not pay back. And a market shift during your hold can compress the ARV you underwrote to. Every one of these is managed the same way: buy right, budget hard with a contingency, move fast, renovate to the comp, and keep a cash cushion. Flipping punishes optimism and rewards conservative math.
Should You Flip, Wholesale, or BRRRR Instead?
Flipping is not the only way to profit from the same distressed inventory. Wholesaling — putting a property under contract and assigning it to another investor for a fee — needs little capital and no renovation, but the per-deal profit is smaller and it is a marketing grind. BRRRR (buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat) uses the same buy-and-renovate skills but keeps the home as a rental, pulling capital back out through a refinance and building long-term wealth plus Las Vegas's strong rental demand — our Las Vegas rental market analysis covers that path. Flipping produces the biggest single-deal cash but is taxed hardest and carries the most execution risk. Many investors run all three depending on the deal: wholesale the ones that do not fit their model, flip the ones with a clean spread, and BRRRR the ones in strong rental pockets. The right choice depends on your capital, your risk tolerance, and your time horizon.
If you are newer to renovation-based buying, it is worth understanding the owner-occupant version first, because the skills overlap and the financing is far cheaper. Our Las Vegas fixer-upper how-to walks through 203(k) and HomeStyle renovation loans that let you buy and fix a home to live in at 3.5% down — a lower-risk way to build the same rehab muscle before you flip with hard money. Some investors also weigh flips against buying new construction to hold or rent, since builder incentives can occasionally rival a flip's return without the renovation risk, and first-time investors often start on the buyer side with a live-in flip before scaling to dedicated deals. Whatever path fits, the underwriting discipline is identical: know the after-repair value, know the all-in cost, and never let optimism set either number.
Why Work With Nevada Real Estate Group to Flip Houses?
Flipping is a numbers business, and the two numbers that decide it — the buy price and the after-repair value — are exactly where a sharp local agent earns their keep. Nevada Real Estate Group is the #1 real estate team in Nevada by RealTrends Verified, with roughly 9,600 closings across the valley and deep experience representing investors on both the buy and the sell. We surface fixer and investor-special listings the moment they hit, pull accurate renovated comps so your ARV is real, run the 70% math with you before you offer, and list the finished flip to sell fast into that 11-day window. On the sell side, our seller services and 7-day listing agreement are built for speed, and if the finished home draws relocating buyers, our moving-to-Las-Vegas guide is a resource we point them to.
Ready to underwrite your first — or next — Las Vegas flip? Call our team at (702) 637-1759 or contact us here, and we will screen the market for deals that pencil and run the numbers with you before you commit a dollar.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is house flipping still profitable in Las Vegas in 2026?
Yes, for disciplined investors. Investor-grade fixers enter around $281,000 while the turnkey median sits near $472,000, and recently-sold renovated fixers cleared in a median 11 days — the spread and the fast resale are both there. What is gone is the appreciation cushion that used to bail out sloppy deals. In 2026 the profit comes from buying at or below the 70% rule and renovating efficiently, not from the market rescuing an overpay. A well-underwritten flip can net roughly $87,000; a careless one loses money.
What is the 70% rule in house flipping?
The 70% rule says never pay more than 70% of a home's after-repair value (ARV) minus the repair cost. On a home with a $475,000 ARV needing $75,000 in work, that is $332,500 minus $75,000, or a maximum offer of $257,500. The 30% you hold back covers financing, holding costs, selling costs, and your profit. Getting the ARV right — from renovated comparable sales, not automated estimates — is the part investors most often get wrong.
How do you finance a house flip in Las Vegas?
Most flippers use hard money — asset-based loans at roughly 10–12% plus a few points that close in days and fund the purchase and staged renovation draws. Private money from an investor's own network and all-cash purchases are the other common routes; cash makes the strongest, fastest offer. Traditional mortgages do not work for flips because they are slow and lend against current condition. Whatever you use, put the financing cost in your underwriting before you buy.
How much money do you need to start flipping houses in Las Vegas?
Even with hard money, plan to bring real cash: a down payment of roughly 10–20% of the purchase, the points and early interest, a renovation reserve, and a contingency. On a $257,500 purchase that can mean $60,000–$100,000 of your own capital in play across the deal. Flipping with no money down is largely a myth; the investors who succeed have reserves to cover surprises and carrying costs when a timeline slips.
What taxes do you pay when you flip a house?
A home flipped within a year is taxed as a short-term capital gain at ordinary income rates, and frequent flippers can be classified as dealers, adding self-employment tax. Nevada has no state income tax, so you avoid a state bite, but the federal treatment is significant — plan for it before you buy. Keep detailed records of every cost, since they raise your basis and lower the taxable gain, and consult a CPA on structure.
Where are the best neighborhoods to flip houses in Las Vegas?
The lowest-entry flip candidates cluster in the older urban core — ZIP codes like 89101 (downtown/east), 89107 (Charleston Heights), 89108 (northwest), 89110 (Sunrise Manor), and 89121 (Winterwood/Paradise), where fixer entry prices run from roughly $195,000 to $255,000. These areas combine dated 1960s–1980s housing with renovated-comp support, and neighboring North Las Vegas holds similar value stock. The newer master plans rarely have true flip candidates. Match the neighborhood's finish standard when you renovate.
Which Sources Inform This Las Vegas House-Flipping Guide?
The entry prices, turnkey median, days-on-market, price-per-square-foot, and ZIP-code breakdowns were pulled from the live Greater Las Vegas MLS (via our Repliers data feed) the week of publication and cross-checked against the roughly 9,600 transactions Nevada Real Estate Group has closed across the valley. Profit figures are illustrative calculations. Rules and tax details draw on the authorities below; consult a licensed contractor, lender, and CPA for your specific deal.
- Clark County Department of Building & Fire Prevention — permits and inspections
- Nevada State Contractors Board — licensing rules under NRS 624
- Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 624 — contractor licensing law
- Internal Revenue Service — Topic 409, Capital Gains — short-term gain and dealer treatment
- Las Vegas REALTORS (GLVAR) — valley inventory and price trends
- Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey — mortgage-rate context
- Clark County Assessor — property and year-built data
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — lending and financing guidance
- U.S. Census Bureau — Las Vegas QuickFacts — housing age and stock
- Nevada Department of Taxation — Nevada tax structure




