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Updated 3 months ago on . Most recent reply

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Tracy Thielman
  • Lender
  • Albermarle, NC
69
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192
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When Does In-House Property Management Start Making Sense?

Tracy Thielman
  • Lender
  • Albermarle, NC
Posted

For investors scaling their portfolios:

At what door count did you decide to bring management in-house rather than using third-party management?

Was the decision primarily about cost savings, operational control, or scalability?

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Jim Johnson#3 Managing Your Property Contributor
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Memphis
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Jim Johnson#3 Managing Your Property Contributor
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Memphis
Replied

Good discussion — the shift usually happens when management stops being a service and starts becoming an operation. 

For many investors, the tipping point is somewhere around 20-40 doors, depending on property type and how concentrated the portfolio is. Below that, third-party management often makes sense because the fixed overhead of staff, systems and oversight can outweigh the savings. 

When portfolios grow, a few factors usually drive the change:

  • Operational control — faster decisions on leasing, maintenance, and capital projects

  • Cost efficiency — management fees start to exceed what an internal team would cost

  • Consistency — standardized processes across units and vendors

  • Scale efficiency — enough units to keep staff fully utilized

That said, door count alone isn’t the whole story. Geographic concentration matters a lot. Thirty units spread across multiple markets is very different from thirty units in one area. 

In practice, many investors land on a hybrid approach for a while using third-party managers in some markets while building internal systems where the density supports it. 

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