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Property Types·6 min read·invest

Residential Real Estate

Also known asResidential PropertyResiResidential
Published Mar 1, 2024Updated Mar 18, 2026

What Is Residential Real Estate?

Residential real estate covers everything from a 3-bedroom house in Phoenix to a 200-unit apartment complex in Denver. Single-family, 2–4 unit small multifamily, and 5+ unit apartment buildings all count. Investors buy for rent, appreciation, or both. The Real Estate Investing guide breaks down the full spectrum. Key distinction: residential is housing. Commercial is offices, retail, industrial, hotels. Different financing, different cap rates, different tenant dynamics.

Residential real estate is property zoned and used for housing — single-family homes, duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes, and apartment buildings. It's where most investors start: familiar asset type, straightforward cash flow math, and depreciation over 27.5 years.

At a Glance

  • What it is: Property used for housing — single-family through large apartment buildings
  • Why it matters: Most accessible entry point for investors; familiar, financeable, depreciable
  • Financing: Conventional, FHA, VA, and agency loans available for 1–4 units; commercial loans for 5+
  • Tax treatment: 27.5-year depreciation on the building; 1031 exchange eligible
  • Scale range: One unit (house hack) to thousands (institutional multifamily)

How It Works

The residential bucket. Anything zoned and used for people to live in. A 3-bedroom house. A duplex. A 12-unit walk-up. A 300-unit high-rise. They're all residential. The line gets fuzzy at the edges — a mixed-use property with apartments above retail is partly residential. But for most investors, residential means: you're renting to people who sleep there.

Unit count changes the game. One to four units: you can use conventional or FHA financing. Fannie and Freddie treat these as "residential" — owner-occupant or investor, 15–25% down typical. Five units and up: you're in commercial territory. Different underwriting. DSCR matters more than your personal income. Loan terms shorten — 5, 7, 10 years with balloons. See the Financing guide for the full breakdown.

Income and appreciation. Residential investors chase two returns. Income: rent minus operating expenses minus debt service equals cash flow. NOI drives cap rate and market value. Appreciation: the property goes up in value over time. Forced appreciation — rehabs, value-add — speeds that up. House hacking and BRRRR both live in residential.

Depreciation is the tax gift. The IRS lets you deduct a portion of the building's value each year over 27.5 years. Land doesn't depreciate — you allocate value between land and improvement. A $280,000 duplex with $56,000 land value gives you $8,145/year in depreciation. That's paper expense — no cash out — but it reduces your taxable income. Depreciation alone can turn a cash flow-positive property into a tax loss on paper.

Real-World Example

Maria: First residential purchase in Austin.

Maria bought a 3-bedroom house in Austin's Montopolis neighborhood for $312,000 in 2024. She put 20% down — $62,400 — and financed the rest at 6.8% for 30 years. Monthly P&I: $1,597.

She rents it for $2,100/month. After operating expenses — $5,200/year property tax, $1,400 insurance, $2,500 maintenance, 5% vacancy rate reserve — her NOI runs about $16,800. Cap rate: 5.4%. Her monthly cash flow after the mortgage: $803. Cash-on-cash return: 15.4%. Not bad for a first single-family rental.

She's building equity through principal paydown and betting on Austin appreciation. The depreciation — roughly $8,000/year on the building — will shelter a chunk of that income come tax time. That's residential real estate working.

Pros & Cons

Advantages
  • Familiar asset — everyone understands a house or apartment
  • Financing is available; conventional, FHA, VA for 1–4 units
  • Depreciation creates paper losses that reduce taxes
  • House hacking lets you live in one unit and rent the rest
  • Tenant demand is relatively stable — people need a place to live
Drawbacks
  • Single-tenant risk on a house — one vacancy = 100% empty
  • Evictions and turnover cost time and money
  • Operating expenses — taxes, insurance, maintenance — keep rising
  • Illiquid; selling takes months and costs closing costs

Watch Out

  • 1–4 vs 5+ unit financing cliff: Cross the 5-unit threshold and your loan options change. Conventional becomes harder. You need DSCR and commercial underwriting. Plan the jump before you buy a 4-plex thinking you'll add a fifth unit later.
  • Land allocation for depreciation: Appraisers and tax assessors split value between land and building. More land value means less depreciable basis. In high-land-cost markets (California, coastal), your depreciation benefit shrinks. Run the numbers.
  • Vacancy assumption: Residential vacancy rates vary by market. Phoenix might run 4%; Cleveland 8%. Use local data, not a generic 5%. Wrong vacancy = wrong NOI = wrong cap rate.
  • Exit timing: 1031 exchange defers gains when you trade up, but the 45-day identification and 180-day close deadlines are strict. Miss them and you owe. Plan your replacement property before you list.

Ask an Investor

The Takeaway

Residential real estate is housing — single-family through apartments. It's where most investors start and where many stay. Financing exists. Depreciation helps. The math is straightforward: rent in, expenses out, cash flow and equity build. Whether you house hack, buy a single-family rental, or scale into multi-family, you're playing in residential. The First Rental Property guide and Deal Analysis guide lay the groundwork.

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