How To Grow From Single-Family Landlord To Multifamily Millionaire

When you think of real estate investing, you probably think of flipping houses or buy and hold single family rentals. In fact, most people start their investing journey in single family rentals. It’s a great place to get your feet wet and you’ll learn about construction, people, financing, and the hands-on how-tos of owning property. 

Once you have a few rental homes, and you’ve scaled to what feels like your max, you will probably get the itch to grow bigger. You might feel ready for multifamily investing. Still, if all your time, energy, and money is tied up in your existing residential real estate rentals, it can seem daunting or downright impossible to level up. 

That’s precisely why you’re here.

You CAN make the move from single-family landlord to multifamily real estate investor. Let’s work through the advantages and disadvantages of each, why it’s important to understand how commercial versus residential properties are valued, and a couple of ways you can transition. 

The Advantages Of Owning Single-Family Rental Real Estate

Single-family real estate investing is familiar, especially if you already purchased your own home. Financing is relatively accessible, and the method to obtaining up to ten loans for residential real estate is based on your credit and income, much like your other personal financial deals. Residential real estate can typically be purchased with a low down payment, a bank loan, private financing, or even cash. 

There are many exit options too. You can sell it at retail, do a lease-to-own deal with your tenants, sell it to an investor, or hold and rent it out.  On top of that, you can buy one single-family rental at a time, allowing you to diversify in a purposeful way. Further diversification can be found by using different property management companies. 

So, let’s say that over the past ten years, you’ve purchased a single-family home every two years in varying surrounding neighborhoods and cities within a metroplex. You own various styles of single-family homes, some large and some small, and you use three different property management firms to help you handle them all. Nice work!

So what might be some disadvantages of owning single-family investment properties like this?

The Disadvantages Of Owning Single-Family Rental Real Estate

With single family rentals, it’s all or none.  When you have a tenant and no maintenance requests, you’ll be building equity without much effort. However, it can turn quickly, when a tenant moves out and you are 100% vacant, or a tornado whips through town and causes tens of thousands of dollars of damage to your houses. The more roofs you own, the greater likelihood of needing to replace one (or more) of those roofs. The more doors you own, the more water heaters, air conditioning systems, and basements or attics you own. For this reason, CapEx (capital expenditures) can be high. 

Furthermore, each property carries its own insurance, tenant lease, warranties, taxes, and management fees; plus, you must maintain bookkeeping for EACH property. I’m sure you can see how this might get out of hand quickly if you aren’t super organized or if you don’t have help with the record-keeping portion of these investments.

When it comes to expanding your investment strategy with single-family real estate, you’ll discover some other hurdles. For one, there is a cap on the number of conventional loans a single person can have on their credit. You can circumvent this for a while if your spouse is on board because then, each of you can have ten loans on your credit, but then what? You’ll still reach a point where you can’t expand further.

The other issue is that the value of your property is determined mainly by the value of the neighbors’ property. Yes, you can make improvements in your single-family home, but “comps,” as they’re commonly referred to, are usually the most significant determining factor of your property value in the single-family realm. Unfortunately, with single-family real estate, you can raise rent and reduce expenses, but that does not change the value of your property. 

The Advantages Of Owning Multifamily Rental Real Estate

As you look to level up from single-family rentals, there are, of course, advantages and disadvantages of owning multifamily real estate too. So, you might be wondering, what’s different about multifamily investing from single-family investing?

One noticeable difference is that a multifamily real estate deal can transfer ownership of multiple units in a single transaction. Talk about simplification!

Whereas you probably have a file cabinet full of documentation for those five properties we were talking about earlier, the purchase of 2-20 (or more!) units all at once would significantly cut down on paperwork.

Similarly, since each multifamily property contains several units, it’s easier to form and leverage a team. A contractor, broker, property manager, and other service-oriented trades will jump at the chance to have a multifamily property owner as their client. Conversely, it’s much harder to find reliable help on each, individual single-family property.

The most significant advantage of owning multifamily rental real estate is your ability to control the property’s value. Commercial property is valued based on the amount of income it creates, so the rental income directly relates to the property value.

You can also assert control over the value by reducing costs, capturing efficiencies, and adding income streams to the property. These value-increasing opportunities might look like installing waste-reducing showerheads in the units, energy-efficient bulbs in all light fixtures, and providing paid lock-box options for residents. With multifamily real estate, you can increase rents and decrease expenses and have a direct impact on the value of your property. 

The Disadvantages Of Owning Multifamily Rental Real Estate

On the flip side, yes, there are disadvantages to owning multifamily real estate, and most of them are in direct opposition to the advantages of owning single-family real estate.  

Perhaps the most considerable disadvantage to owning multifamily rental real estate as an investment is that you have limited exits. Most people don’t have millions in their bank accounts to buy an apartment complex by themselves. Your sale will likely be limited to other investors or corporations. 

Some other disadvantages have to do with the diversity of markets and property managers. If you own a single property with 50 doors, you aren’t diversified in either the market or property management. You have all your eggs in one basket. *This is where syndications help because you can own a percentage of several multifamily properties instead of a single 50 unit property.

Another challenge to owning multifamily property lies in obtaining financing. Generally, multifamily properties have a larger price tag, and your standard lenders cannot finance that large of a loan on your personal credit. You will probably work with an agency lender who won’t care about your single family investing experience. 

How To Transition From Single-Family to Multifamily Rental Real Estate

No matter how you slice the pie, it can be challenging to become a multi-millionaire off single-family rentals alone. Multifamily investing is the key to reaching that next tier of wealth, freedom, and experience. There are a few ways to do this, but the most common are “Stacking” and “Leverage.” 

One gradual, potentially safe-feeling way to uplevel is to “stack” your real estate investments, doubling the number of doors you purchase with each transaction. In stacking, you start with a single-family home, and every two years, you’re going to buy another piece of real estate. Well, every two years, instead of purchasing another single-family home, you buy a duplex, and then a quad, and then an 8-plex, and so on. In just ten years (in the blink of an eye), you’d own 31 units! 

The other option is to leverage your earnings from your single-family investments into a multifamily real estate syndication deal. If you own five single-family properties, and each one cash flows $200 per month, you have $12,000 each year to funnel toward a syndication opportunity. Since the typical minimum on a syndication deal is about $50,000, you’ll quickly achieve that in 5 years, even with capital expenditures and maintenance on your five properties!

Is Becoming A Multifamily Millionaire In Your Cards?

With our experience in single-family rentals AND multifamily deals of all types, we always advise you to take a step back and look at your goals. Why are you investing? Does it make sense for you to personally own and manage 31 doors over five properties? Does it make sense for you to be more hands-off and collect disbursements without being a landlord?

Any choice is a great one, because you’re choosing your personal, family, and financial goals over anything else and using real estate investments to help you get there. If you’re interested in learning more about syndications because the “Leverage” route sounds interesting to you, you’re invited to join the Key Stream Investor’s Club.

Inside, you’ll learn all the details about real estate syndication deals, learn everything you need to embark upon your first syndication deal, and meet other fellow investors like yourself. We look forward to helping you achieve your investment goals!