How You Actually Get Paid in a Real Estate Syndication

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial advice. Always consult with your investment advisor or CPA before making decisions.

If you’re new to syndications, one of the most common questions is simple: how do I actually make money?

You’re not managing the property. You’re not on the loan. You’re not fixing plumbing or chasing down rent. So how does the money flow back to you?

Let’s break it down.

You Invest Capital. We Put It to Work.

When you invest in a real estate syndication, you become a limited partner in a larger deal. Your capital is pooled with other investors to purchase a property, and that property produces income, usually from rent.

That income is first used to cover operating expenses, maintenance, and loan payments. What’s left over is distributed to investors, usually on a monthly basis. This is your cash flow, income that comes in while you still own your equity.

Preferred Returns: What Gets Paid First

Most of our deals are structured with what’s called a preferred return. This means limited partners (investors like you) get paid first, up to a certain return threshold, before the sponsor takes any profit.

For example, a deal might offer a 7% preferred return. That means that the Limited Partners get all the distributions until you are receiving 7% on your initial investment.

It creates alignment. You get paid first. I only get paid after you do.

Profit Splits: Sharing the Upside

Once preferred returns are met, any additional profit is split between investors and the sponsor. A common split is 70/30—meaning 70% goes to investors and 30% to the sponsor. Some deals adjust this over time or have performance tiers, but most are straightforward.

This split applies to both cash flow and profits at the sale of the property.

Sale or Refinance: Equity Gains

Most syndications have a target hold period of 3 to 10 years. During that time, the property may appreciate, rents may rise, and improvements may increase its value.

At the end of the hold period, the property is typically sold or refinanced. The proceeds are used to pay off the loan and return your original investment. Then any remaining profits are split according to the same structure.

That’s where many investors see a larger payout, but it’s important to remember: well-structured deals are built on cash flow first, not just a big exit.

Real Example (Simplified)

You invest $100,000 in a deal with a 7% preferred return and a 70/30 profit split.

  • Assuming the deal is cash flowing enough after all expenses and fees, you receive $7,000 per year in distributions (cash flow)

  • After 5 years, the property sells and your $100,000 is returned

  • There is a $50,000 profit from the sale

  • Limited Partners receive 70% of that ($35,000), for this example we assume that your $100k is the only limited partner.

Total return: $35,000 in cash flow, $35,000 in sale profit = $70,000 on $100,000 invested, or a 14% annualized return (commonly called IRR, Internal Rate of Return)

This is just a hypothetical, but it shows how simple the structure can be when the deal is done right.

The Sponsor’s Role (And Why It Matters)

As the sponsor, I handle every aspect of the deal: acquisitions, financing, due diligence, operations, reporting, and the final sale. My job is to protect your capital, grow it, and report honestly along the way.

That’s why I personally invest in every deal I offer. It keeps me fully aligned with every investor in the room.

What to Look For

Not all syndications are structured equally. Ask:

  • Is there a preferred return?

  • How is the profit split structured?

  • Who manages the day-to-day decisions?

  • Is the sponsor invested in the deal?

When done right, syndications can offer predictable cash flow, strong upside, and real ownership without the stress of managing it yourself.

Want to see how our current opportunities are structured? Join the investor list or request access to the Deal Room.

You’ll see exactly how you get paid, where your money goes, and why this strategy has worked for generations of wealth builders.

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