
Residential vs Commercial: What 2–4 Units vs 5+ Means for Investors
1–4 units = residential financing and comps. 5+ = commercial loans and income-based appraisal. Here's what crosses at that threshold.
- 1–4 units = residential: 30-year fixed, Fannie/Freddie, comp-based appraisal. 5+ = commercial: 5–7 yr ARM, income-based valuation
- Conventional loan limit 2024: $766,550 single-unit; 2–4 unit limits vary by county
- Commercial lenders value by NOI ÷ cap rate — your income drives the number, not sold comps
- Some investors deliberately stay under 5 units to keep residential financing and avoid balloon risk
The line between residential and commercial real estate isn't a gray zone. It's a hard cutoff at five units. One through four? Residential. Five and up? Commercial. Different lenders. Different loan terms. Different appraisal methods. And that single unit difference can change everything about how you finance, value, and manage a property.
Here's what actually shifts when you cross that threshold — and why some investors deliberately stop at four.
The Classification: 1–4 vs 5+
Residential (1–4 units): Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA, conventional. Treated like a house. You get 30-year fixed rates. You get comp-based appraisals. You get the same lending process your neighbor used to buy a duplex.
Commercial (5+ units): Commercial lenders. Banks, credit unions, life insurance companies, CMBS. No Fannie/Freddie. No 30-year fixed. You're in a different world.
The cutoff is strict. A fourplex is residential. A fiveplex is commercial. There's no in-between. That's why the Small Multifamily Investing guide focuses on 2–4 units — it's the last stop before the rules change.
Financing: 30-Year Fixed vs 5–7 Year ARM
Residential (2–4 units): FHA loan at 3.5% down if you owner-occupy. Conventional 15–25% down. Rates locked for 30 years. No balloon. No refinance cliff. You know your payment for the life of the loan.
Commercial (5+): Typical terms: 5–7 year fixed period, then ARM or balloon. Amortization often 20–25 years. LTV 65–75%. DSCR 1.2–1.35. You're refinancing every 5–7 years. Rate risk. Balloon risk. If rates spike when your term ends, you're renegotiating in a tougher environment.
Conventional loan limits for 2024: $766,550 single-unit in most areas. 2-unit, 3-unit, 4-unit limits scale up by county — check your local limit. Once you cross to 5+ units, those limits don't apply. You're in commercial territory. Different underwriting. Different documentation. Different everything.
Appraisal: Comps vs Income Approach
Residential: Sales comparison. The appraiser finds similar 2–4 unit properties that sold recently. Your value is based on what comps traded for. Location, condition, rent — they influence the comp selection. But the number comes from sold data.
Commercial: Income approach. Value = NOI ÷ cap rate. Your cap rate drives the number. A 6% cap on $48,000 NOI = $800,000 value. A 7% cap = $685,714. Same property. Different cap rate assumption. Different value. The appraiser looks at comparable sales of similar-sized multifamily to support the cap rate — but the math is income-based. Your rent roll and expenses determine the number. Not comps.
That shift matters. In residential, a hot market can push comps up even if rents are flat. In commercial, if your NOI drops — vacancy, higher expenses — your value drops. The appraisal is tied to income. Run your numbers accordingly.
Insurance and Management
Residential (1–4): Standard dwelling policy. Same bucket as a single-family rental. Insurers know the product. Premiums are predictable.
Commercial (5+): Commercial property policy. Different coverage. Different deductibles. Often higher premiums. You're insuring a business, not a house.
Management scales too. Most investors self-manage 1–4 units. At 5+, you're crossing into territory where professional property manager becomes the norm. More tenants. More turnover. More compliance. The 4–7 unit range is where many hit the wall — still residential financing if you're at 4, but the management load starts to feel commercial.
Why Some Investors Stay Under 5 Units
Deliberately. Not because they can't scale — because they don't want the commercial headache.
Rate lock. 30-year fixed. No balloon. No refinance cliff. Sleep at night.
Simpler underwriting. Residential lenders want W-2s, tax returns, credit score. Commercial lenders want rent rolls, operating statements, trailing 12 months of income. More paperwork. More scrutiny.
Comps-based value. In a rising market, residential appraisals can keep pace with sales. Commercial appraisals are income-driven. If cap rates expand, your value shrinks even if rents are stable.
Lower barrier. Fourplex is the ceiling for FHA. Fourplex is the ceiling for conventional residential. Cross to five and you're shopping a different product.
The trade-off: you're capped at four doors per property. To scale, you buy more properties. More mortgages. More insurance policies. More roofs. Some investors prefer that — four 4-unit buildings instead of one 16-unit. Same door count. Different structure. Residential financing on all of them.
When to Cross the Threshold
You want more doors under one roof. One mortgage. One insurance policy. One maintenance run. Economies of scale.
You're ready for commercial terms. ARM. Balloon. Income-based appraisal. You've run the refi scenarios and you're comfortable with the risk.
You have (or will hire) a PM. Five units and up, self-management gets heavy. Professional management is the norm. Budget 8–12% of rent.
You're targeting institutional-style returns. Cap rate plays. Value-add. Commercial lenders understand that game. Residential lenders don't.
The inflection point is different for everyone. Some cross at 5. Some at 8. Some never cross — they build a portfolio of 2–4 unit properties and stay residential forever. The financing guide walks through both paths. The choice is yours.
What Happens at Refinance
Residential: you refi when rates drop or you want to pull equity. Same process as the original loan. 30-year fixed. Comps-based appraisal. You're in the same lane.
Commercial: your 5–7 year term ends. You're refinancing. The lender re-underwrites. New cap rate environment. New DSCR requirements. If rates are up, your payment jumps. If your NOI dipped — a vacancy, higher insurance — the new loan might not pencil. Balloon risk is real. You need a refi plan 12–18 months before the term ends. Commercial investors budget for that. Residential investors don't have to.
That's the hidden cost of crossing the threshold. Not just the ARM. The refi cycle. Every 5–7 years you're back at the table. Residential? You locked for 30. Done.
The Bottom Line
1–4 units: residential. 30-year fixed. Comps. FHA and conventional. Simple.
5+ units: commercial. ARM. Income approach. Different lenders. Different rules.
The threshold is real. Know where you stand before you shop. And if you're in the 2–4 unit zone, you're in the sweet spot — residential financing with multiple income streams. One roof. One mortgage. No commercial complexity. Until you're ready for it.
Quick reference: FHA stops at 4 units. Conventional residential stops at 4. Your appraisal is comp-based. Your rate is fixed. Your refi is optional, not mandatory. Cross to 5 and every one of those changes. The Small Multifamily Investing guide stays in the 2–4 lane for a reason. It's where most investors should start — and where many choose to stay.
The 4-unit cap strategy: Some investors deliberately buy fourplexes and stop. They could buy a 6-unit or an 8-unit. They have the capital. They have the experience. They choose four. Why? Residential financing. No balloon. No income-based appraisal. No commercial refi cycle. They scale by buying more fourplexes — 2, 3, 4 properties — each with its own 30-year fixed loan. Same door count as one 16-unit. Different structure. Different risk. For risk-averse investors, that's the play. Four units per property. Residential forever.
Loan limit check: Before you shop, know your county's conventional limit. In 2024, single-unit limits ranged from $766,550 to over $1.1M in high-cost areas. 2–4 unit limits scale up. A fourplex in a $766K county might cap at $1.2M or so. If your target property exceeds that, you're in jumbo territory — still residential, but different underwriting. The 5-unit threshold is separate. That's the commercial line. Loan limits apply to both. Know both before you offer. Fannie Mae's website has a lookup tool by address.
NOI (net operating income) is what a property earns from operations each year. Rental revenue minus vacancy loss and operating expenses. Before you subtract the mortgage, CapEx, or taxes.
Read definition →Cap rate (capitalization rate) is the annual percentage return a property generates based on its net operating income divided by its purchase price or current market value. It strips out financing entirely — showing what you'd earn if you paid all cash — making it one of the fastest ways to compare deals across different markets.
Read definition →A ratio that measures whether a rental property's income covers its debt payments — calculated by dividing rental income by total debt service (PITIA), where 1.0 means breakeven and 1.25+ means strong cash flow.
Read definition →An FHA loan is a government-insured mortgage that lets qualified borrowers buy 1–4 unit properties with as little as 3.5% down — as long as they live in one unit as their primary residence for at least 12 months.
Read definition →Jacob Hill
Financing & Strategy Analyst
Financing and leveraging real estate assets are where I shine, strategizing for maximum gains. A chess aficionado, I bring my love for the game's tactics to every deal.
Small Multifamily Investing: Your Guide to 2-4 Unit Properties
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