IRR is the interest rate at which your project breaks even — where the money you invest today equals the value of all the cash you get back tomorrow.
Here’s the idea:
If you invest $12,000 today, and your project gives you steady returns over 5 years, the IRR tells you what annual rate of return you’d be earning over those years.
If your IRR is:
So, IRR helps answer the golden question in project planning:
“Is this engineering project financially viable over time?”
Great question! Let’s break down the two big players in project evaluation:
| Metric | IRR | NPV |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Rate where NPV = 0 | Net value today of future cash flows |
| Unit | % (Rate of Return) | Currency ($, €, ₹) |
| Use Case | Quick comparison between projects | Understanding total value created |
| Sensitive To? | Unusual cash flow patterns | Discount rate you choose |
| Best For | Simpler projects with conventional cash flows | Complex or multi-stage projects |
Use IRR when: You want a quick sense of return in percentage form — especially helpful when comparing multiple small projects.
Use NPV when: You need the actual value the project adds, or if you’re evaluating projects with non-standard cash flows (e.g., funding gaps, reinvestments).
In real-world engineering:
IRR is your project’s report card score — if it passes the class (your benchmark rate), it’s worth pursuing!
NPV tells you how much gold is actually in the treasure chest.
Use our NPV calculator to evaluate your project.