Updated 16 days ago on . Most recent reply
- Real Estate Consultant
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Why some “good deals” still fail after acquisition
One thing we keep noticing is that many investment mistakes happen after the acquisition decision was already made.
Not because the investor ignored comps.
But because the operational side of the deal was underestimated.
Sometimes the numbers technically work:
* ARV looks reasonable
* rents support the projection
* acquisition price seems acceptable
But then execution starts:
* permitting delays appear
* contractor timelines shift
* insurance becomes more expensive
* utility upgrades are required
* slope/foundation issues surface
* holding costs expand
* exit timing changes
At that point, the problem is no longer valuation.
It becomes a project management and execution problem.
What’s interesting is that many underwriting models still focus heavily on pricing and comparable sales, while operational risk is often treated more like a rough assumption.
Especially in:
* value-add projects
* redevelopment
* ADU-heavy markets
* older housing stock
* complex remodels
Curious how experienced investors here account for execution uncertainty today.
Do you mainly rely on:
* contingency buffers?
* local contractor relationships?
* experience-based intuition?
* conservative timelines?
* internal scoring systems?
Or is there another framework that’s worked well for you?



