Smart moves every investor should know before buying their next property
Multifamily real estate has a well-earned reputation as one of the more resilient investment vehicles. Multiple units mean multiple income streams, and when one tenant leaves, the whole property doesn’t go dark overnight. But that built-in buffer doesn’t make multifamily investing risk-free. The risks are different and manageable if you take the right approach.
Continue reading to learn how experienced investors reduce their exposure and protect their returns for the long haul.
1. Do the homework before you do the deal
The single biggest risk in multifamily investing isn’t a bad market. It’s a bad deal that looked good on paper.
Before you close on anything, look beyond what the seller is showing you. Check the actual rent amounts tenants are paying, not just the numbers the seller put together. Review the lease agreements, assess the building’s condition, and determine whether any repairs have been deferred. A property with a low price tag might be hiding some expensive problems.
A few things every investor should check before signing:
- Actual vs. projected rents: what tenants are paying now vs. what the seller claims the market supports
- Repair and maintenance history: problems that were never fixed will become your problem
- Lease end dates: if most leases expire soon, you could face a lot of empty units at once
- Utility costs and who pays them: if the owner covers utilities, that can quietly eat into your profits
Skipping this step is one of the most common ways investors lose money, and it’s completely avoidable.
Related resource:
How to create a multifamily investment business plan
2. Understand the market and the neighborhood
Location matters in real estate. That’s not just a saying.
Properties in areas with growing job markets, more people moving in, and not enough housing tend to stay full and hold their value well. But don’t just look at the city as a whole. Dig into the specific neighborhood, how it’s changing over time, and how close it is to jobs and public transit. Cities where many different types of businesses and industries operate are much safer bets than towns that rely heavily on one employer.
As Multifamily Investment Advisor Joe LaFleur says, you’re not just investing in a building; you’re investing in the people and jobs around it.
Pro tip: Don’t ignore local rental laws. Some cities and states make it much harder for landlords to handle problem tenants or raise rents. Make sure you understand the rules before you invest in a new market.
Learn more:
How to Evaluate a Multifamily Property in Central Florida
3. Borrow less than you think you can
Taking on too much debt can work against you fast.
When things are going well, it can feel smart to borrow as much as possible. But when vacancies go up, or interest rates change, that debt can turn a good property into a money pit. Keeping your loan amount reasonable, making sure the rent covers your payments with room to spare, and locking in a fixed interest rate all give you a cushion when things don’t go as planned.
A rule most experienced investors follow: keep enough cash on hand to cover 3 to 6 months of property expenses. It might feel like money just sitting there, but it’s your safety net when something unexpected comes up.
4. Don’t put all your units in one basket
Owning everything in one place is a real risk. If that one market takes a hit, so does your entire investment.
Spreading your money across more than one property, or even more than one city, means a problem in one place won’t sink everything. You don’t need to own a huge number of properties to make this work. Even having two properties in different areas can make a big difference. The bigger your portfolio gets, the more important it becomes to spread things out.
Related resource:
How to build a successful multifamily investment portfolio
5. Build a property management system that actually works
Bad management is one of the top reasons multifamily properties underperform. A great property in a great location can still lose money if it’s not run well.
Whether you manage it yourself or bring in a management company, you need solid systems in place:
| Area | What Good Looks Like |
| Tenant Screening | Clear, consistent standards for income, credit, and rental history |
| Maintenance | Fast response times and reliable vendors |
| Rent Collection | Easy, automated systems with clear late fee policies |
| Reporting | Monthly financial reports you actually read and understand |
If you hire a property manager, stay involved. Look over the monthly reports, keep an eye on vacancy rates, and make sure you notice if anything seems off.
6. Screen tenants carefully, every single time
An empty unit costs you money. A bad tenant can cost you more.
A tenant who doesn’t pay rent, trashes the unit, or causes problems for neighbors can end up costing far more than a few missed rent payments. A solid screening process that checks income, credit, rental history, and references is one of the easiest and most effective ways to protect yourself. Just make sure you apply the same standards to every applicant to stay within fair housing laws.
Good tenants stick around longer, pay on time, and take better care of your property.
Related resource:
What makes a good tenant for your multifamily property
Multifamily real estate rewards patience and consistency. Markets go up and down, interest rates change, and the economy shifts, but investors who buy smart, manage well, and hold on through rough patches usually come out ahead. Focus on properties that generate steady income and that you’d be happy to own for the next five to ten years.
The multifamily investment strategies that work aren’t complicated or secret. They just require doing the basics right, every time.
How we can help
At 100Units, our skilled and passionate team of multifamily brokers and agents will meet all of your multifamily property needs by analyzing trends, market conditions, and local competition to ensure your investment success.
If you’re looking for expert advice on investing in a multifamily property or searching for the right property to acquire in Florida, contact our team today at 866.GO.UNITS or fill out the form here to get started.