Skip to content

Let's keep in touch

Subscribe to our newsletter for timely insights and actionable tips on your real estate journey.

By signing up, you indicate that you agree to the BiggerPockets Terms & Conditions
BPCON2026 Orlando

October 2 - 4 Early Bird tickets are now ON SALE. Purchase your tickets today and save $100!

Get tickets
BPCON2026 Orlando

October 2 - 4 Early Bird tickets are now ON SALE. Purchase your tickets today and save $100!

Get tickets
Followed Discussions Followed Categories Followed People Followed Locations
Buying & Selling Real Estate
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

Updated about 1 month ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

63
Posts
29
Votes
Jamison Remmers
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Tustin, CA
29
Votes |
63
Posts

102 Unit Apartment Complex in San Diego

Jamison Remmers
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Tustin, CA
Posted

I'm on Crexi.com looking for a multifamily investment property, and I came across this gem. I've been deducting 5% for potential vacancy and 35% for expenses from the NOI displayed on the website. While running my numbers, I'm finding that this eliminates any chance of cash flow from almost every property.

I've messed around with the numbers to see how I can get the cash flow to positive, but I'm curious if I'm doing things correctly. If I raise the down payment to around 50%, the cash flow is positive, but that seems like a rather large down payment. Is this a method people are using to offset the expenses, or is negative cash flow expected until you acquire the property and raise rents to achieve the desired ROI?

Thank you all for your help and advice. I'm debating looking out of state if I can't find a property with positive cash flow locally.

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

1,270
Posts
1,206
Votes
Kerlous Tadres
  • Realtor
  • Columbus, OH
1,206
Votes |
1,270
Posts
Kerlous Tadres
  • Realtor
  • Columbus, OH
Replied

@Jamison Remmers, most Crexi "NOI" numbers are optimistic, and when you add real vacancy/expenses plus today's loan payment, a lot of deals won't cash flow at normal down payments. I'd only take negative/flat cash flow if there's a clear plan to raise rents or cut expenses fast, or you can get better terms like lower price, seller financing, or assumable debt. Otherwise, look at a more affordable market.

business profile image
Kerlous Tadres | Reafco Real Estate
5.0 stars
37 Reviews

Loading replies...