🏠 Rent Increase Calculator

Calculate your new rent based on the increase rate in compliance with legal limits.

Enter the CPI 12-month average increase rate
Rent increase is legally limited to 25% in Turkey

🏠 What is Rent Increase Calculator?

Rent increase calculation is the process of calculating the amount of increase to be made to your current rent and the new rent price. With our online rent increase calculator, you can calculate your rent increase within legal limits and learn your rights as both a tenant and a landlord.

Rent Increase Rules in Turkey

📋 Legal Regulations:

  • Maximum Increase: Annual 25% (Code of Obligations No. 6098)
  • Increase Time: At contract anniversary
  • Notification: Written notification at least 1 month in advance
  • CPI Connection: Usually based on CPI increase

What is CPI (Consumer Price Index)?

CPI is an economic indicator that measures the change in consumer prices. The 12-month average of CPI is generally used in rent increases.

📈 CPI Increase

Reflects the inflation rate

Announced by TURKSTAT

⚖️ Legal Limit

Maximum 25% increase

Cannot exceed CPI

📅 Application

Contract anniversary

1 month prior notice

Rent Increase Calculation Formula

Formula:

  • Increase Amount = Current Rent × (Increase Rate ÷ 100)
  • New Rent = Current Rent + Increase Amount
  • Legal Limit: min(CPI Increase, 25%)

Tenant and Landlord Rights

👤 Tenant Rights

  • Objcet to increase exceeding 25%
  • Receive notification 1 month in advance
  • Apply to court
  • Protect contract conditions

🏠 Landlord Rights

  • Increase within legal limits
  • Demand increase at CPI rate
  • Contract renewal
  • Make written notification

Use Cases

  • Annual rent increase calculation
  • Contract renewal negotiations
  • Learning legal rights
  • Budget planning
  • Evidence in court processes

Advantages

  • ✅ Legal limit check
  • ✅ Fast and accurate calculation
  • ✅ For both tenant and landlord
  • ✅ CPI-based calculation
  • ✅ Free to use
💡 Tip: In case of disagreement regarding rent increase, you can apply to local courts or benefit from mediation services.