Industry benchmark · 2026

Average profit margin in R.E.I.T.

The average net profit margin in the R.E.I.T. industry is about 13.2%, across 190 U.S. companies in this group. That's well above the all-industry average of about 9.7%, marking R.E.I.T. as a relatively high-margin business.

R.E.I.T.: margins vs the whole market

MarginR.E.I.T.All industries
Gross margin 58.1% 37.8%
Operating margin 24.6% 12.8%
EBITDA margin 43.8% 16.6%
Net profit margin 13.2% 9.7%

2026 data, Aswath Damodaran (NYU Stern). "All industries" is the U.S. total-market average for reference.

How to read these margins

  • Gross (58.1%): revenue left after the direct cost of goods sold.
  • Operating (24.6%): after operating expenses — roughly EBIT ÷ revenue.
  • Net (13.2%): the bottom line, after all costs, interest, and tax.

Want to check your own business against these benchmarks? Use the profit margin calculator.

A note on benchmarks

These are averages across many companies, so an individual business can land far above or below. Margins also vary with scale, business model, and accounting choices — use them as a sanity check, not a target.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average profit margin in the R.E.I.T. industry?

The average net profit margin in the R.E.I.T. industry is about 13.2%, based on 190 U.S. companies in this group. Its average gross margin is about 58.1% and operating margin about 24.6% (2026 data).

What's the difference between gross, operating, and net margin?

Gross margin is revenue minus the direct cost of goods, as a percent of revenue. Operating margin subtracts operating expenses (it's roughly EBIT ÷ revenue). Net margin is the bottom line — what's left after all expenses, interest, and taxes.

Where does this data come from?

From Professor Aswath Damodaran of NYU Stern, who compiles average margins by industry from U.S. company financials and refreshes the dataset every January (2026 edition).

Last reviewed June 20, 2026. Figures based on the NYU Stern (Damodaran) industry margin dataset. Estimates for general education, not financial advice.