Skip to content
Two investors reviewing resources on a laptop

Get industry-leading resources — for free

Unlock resources for every investing strategy and stage with a free account.

By continuing, you agree to BiggerPockets LLC's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Followed Discussions Followed Categories Followed People Followed Locations
Multi-Family and Apartment Investing
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 4 months ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

55
Posts
22
Votes
Gabe Goudreau
  • Investor
  • Lansing, MI
22
Votes |
55
Posts

How Are You Structuring Your Multifamily Waterfalls?

Gabe Goudreau
  • Investor
  • Lansing, MI
Posted

I’ve been upgrading the waterfall section in my large multifamily underwriting model and focused on something I don’t see handled well in a lot of template models - flexibility.

Right now it can handle:

• Any simple equity split
• Separate GP co-invest vs ownership (e.g. GP invests 5% but earns 10% ownership)
• Preferred return structures in a true pari passu format
• Promote splits above the pref
• Fully dynamic LP / GP cash flow breakdown tied to refinance + exit

No hard-coded 70/30. No rigid assumptions. Just clean inputs that drive everything downstream.

I’m curious how others here are modeling their deals:

Are you keeping it simple?

Using pref + promote?

Going more in-depth with multiple tiers of IRR hurdles?

I build high-level, operator-grade multifamily models and am always refining them based on real-world deal structures. If anyone wants to compare approaches or see how this one is structured, feel free to reach out.

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

4,063
Posts
3,760
Votes
Evan Polaski#5 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Cincinnati, OH
3,760
Votes |
4,063
Posts
Evan Polaski#5 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Cincinnati, OH
Replied

@Gabe Goudreau

Asset management fees are always below the line items. They are not part of NOI, nor even property level cash flows. They are partnership level and should be handled as such.

What Chris, I believe, is saying, is a quick toggle to accrue fees until adequate cash is available AND return of capital has occured, sort of like a GP catch-up.

At the end of the day though, I cannot speak to what your goal is, but there are a thousand possible waterfalls and capital stack structures.  Beyond the waterfall, does your model allow for multiple debt/pref equity tranches?  Refi scenario testing?  Common assumption sensitivity tables?  Class A/B/C share classes, sometimes with varying priorities and sometimes pari passu with different prefs/hurdles, etc.

Again, not sure what feedback you are looking for, and what you have is a good start, but these can become so much more complicated, if you start offering up every option to everyone.


Loading replies...