Prorated Rent Calculator
Calculate prorated rent for a partial month based on days occupied, move-in date, or move-out date. Get the exact daily rate and prorated amount instantly.
Prorated Rent = (Monthly Rent ÷ Days in Month) × Days OccupiedAdjust Variables
Interactive Step-by-Step Calculation Proofs
View how variables resolve algebraically down to peer-reviewed standard outputs.
Dynamic E-E-A-T Metric Valuation
Prorated rent is the partial-month amount a tenant owes when they move in or move out on a date other than the first of the month — instead of paying the full monthly rent for a period they didn't fully occupy. Landlords and property managers calculate it by first finding the daily rent rate (Monthly Rent ÷ Days in Month), then multiplying that rate by the number of days actually occupied. There are two common methods: the exact days-in-month method, which divides by the real number of days in the specific month (28–31), and the banker's month (30-day) method, which some leases specify for simplicity by always dividing by 30 regardless of the actual month length. The two methods can produce slightly different results, so it's worth checking which one your lease specifies. Our prorated rent calculator supports three ways to get the answer: enter the days occupied directly, enter your move-in day of the month, or enter your move-out day of the month — each mode returns the prorated rent, the daily rate, and either the days occupied or the amount not charged. For proration outside of rent — insurance premiums, salary, or ownership shares — see the general-purpose pro rata calculator.
Mathematical Formula Explanation
Calculated standard benchmarks are based on direct functional dependencies. The primary calculation logic follows this formula:
Prorated Rent = (Monthly Rent ÷ Days in Month) × Days OccupiedWhen using our reverse-solving system, the unknown parameter is algebraically isolated. For instance, solving for total impressions required derived from an active budget uses the inverted ratio, safeguarding metrics calculations against arbitrary platform fees or roundoffs.
Standard Campaign Scenarios (Step-by-Step)
Review these typical campaign outlines to verify how calculation steps behave under realistic media buying conditions:
Example 1: Moving In Mid-Month
“A tenant signs a lease for $1,500/month rent and moves in on June 15th. June has 30 days. How much rent is owed for June?”
- MONTHLYRENT: 1,500
- DAYSINMONTH: 30
- MOVEINDAY: 15
- PRORATEDRENT: 800
- DAILYRATE: 50
- DAYSOCCUPIED: 16
Example 2: Moving Out Mid-Month
“A tenant pays $1,800/month rent and gives notice to move out on March 10th. March has 31 days. How much rent is owed for March?”
- MONTHLYRENT: 1,800
- DAYSINMONTH: 31
- MOVEOUTDAY: 10
- PRORATEDRENT: 580.65
- DAILYRATE: 58.06
- DAYSOCCUPIED: 10