Investing in Multi-Family Print

"Multi-family will make you a millionaire."
Dave Lindahl, Real Estate Investor


You can see the advantage of controlling a large number of units if you want to create wealth quickly. But the average investor doesn't have all the necessary tools or skills to do that. Let's examine three ways to invest in real estate and the advantages and disadvantages of each:

1Buying a small – or large – portfolio by of single family homes yourself. Advantage: you control everything about the portfolio and all the profit is yours. Disadvantage: unless you have deep pockets, this is out of reach for most investors. And you should hire a property management firm or you could end up with nothing more than a job.

2Buying shares in a Real Estate Income Trust – Advantage: Average dividend yield of 6+%; fairly safe. Disadvantages: the stock market has outperformed REIT's in the past few years; large institutions generally are the managers, and they have much higher volatility than directly owned real estate.

3Investing in a Limited Partnership where the General Partner finds, negotiates, purchases and manages a carefully selected pool of properties for maximum return. Advantages: 20 – 25% average annual return with quarterly cash flow for a total of 100% to 125% in 4 to 5 years, low investment buy-in (minimum of only $25,000) – a truly "armchair investment". Disadvantage: Less liquid than a REIT.