- 01Private syndications let you invest $25-50K into deals worth $5-50M — no landlording required
- 02The GP (general partner) runs the deal; you're the LP (limited partner) collecting distributions
- 03Target 7-9% cash-on-cash and 15-20% IRR over a 5-7 year hold period
- 04Accredited investor status requires $200K income or $1M net worth — but some deals accept non-accredited via Reg D 506(b)
Show Notes
A 300-unit apartment building in Dallas goes for $45 million. You don't have $45 million. You've got $50,000. So how do you get into that deal? You don't. Unless you know about syndication.
A sponsor pools capital from dozens of investors — you and 50 others — and buys the building. You're the LP. They're the GP. You collect distributions. They run the deal. No landlording. No midnight calls. No evictions. Your $50,000 buys you a fractional share of the NOI and the equity upside when they sell in five to seven years. That's the pitch. And for the right deals, it works.
I'm Martin Maxwell, and today on 5-Minute PRIME we're kicking off a syndication mini-series. Episode 69: the GP/LP structure, the numbers, and who can actually invest.
Timestamps
0:00 — Introduction: million-dollar deals for regular investors 1:15 — GP/LP structure: who does what 2:30 — The numbers: typical returns and hold periods 4:00 — Accredited vs. non-accredited investor access 5:15 — Next episode: how to vet the sponsor
GP/LP Structure: Who Does What
The GP — general partner — finds the deal, negotiates the purchase, arranges the debt, and runs the property. They put in sweat equity and usually 5% to 10% of the capital. They're the ones on the hook if something goes wrong. They get paid through fees: acquisition fees (1% to 2% of purchase price), asset management fees (1% to 2% of equity per year), and a promote — a cut of the profits above a certain return threshold. Usually 20% to 30% of profits above an 8% preferred return. So if the deal crushes it, they crush it with you.
You're the LP. Limited partner. You write a check. $25,000, $50,000, $100,000. You're passive. You get distributions. You don't vote on day-to-day decisions. You don't pick the property manager. You trust the GP. That's the trade. Capital for control.
The NOI — net operating income — flows to you after the mortgage gets paid. Cap rate at purchase matters. So does the exit strategy. Value-add deals buy at 5.5% to 6.5%, force appreciation through renovations and rent bumps, and sell at 4.5% to 5.5% in five to seven years. The spread is where the equity grows. Buy at 6%, sell at 5% — that's a 20% value lift from cap rate compression alone. Add rent growth and you're talking real returns.
The Numbers: Typical Returns and Hold Periods
Target 7% to 9% cash-on-cash return during the hold. That's cash distributions as a percentage of your invested capital. On a $50,000 check, you're looking at $3,500 to $4,500 a year in distributions. Not life-changing. But it's cash flow without touching a toilet. And it's quarterly. You get a check every three months.
The real upside? The equity event. At sale, 15% to 20% IRR over a 5-7 year hold is typical for a well-executed value-add deal. That means your $50,000 could come back as $100,000 to $140,000. The catch? You're locked up. Five to seven years. No early redemption. You're in until the sponsor sells. If they extend the hold? You're extended. Read the operating agreement.
The cash flow during the hold is the steady part. The equity event is the multiplier. Most investors are in it for both.
Accredited vs. Non-Accredited: Who Can Invest?
Most syndications are only open to accredited investors. That means $200K in income for the last two years (or $300K joint), or $1M net worth excluding your primary residence. The SEC says that's who can invest in private offerings without extra disclosure. Roughly 10% of US households qualify. If you're there, you're in. The rest? Don't assume you're shut out.
But some deals use Reg D 506(b). That allows up to 35 non-accredited investors if the sponsor has a pre-existing relationship with them. So if you're not accredited yet, you're not locked out forever. You need to get on a sponsor's list before they raise the round. Build the relationship. Attend the webinars. Join the email list. The 506(b) window closes when the sponsor files the offering. Get in before they file.
Next Up: How to Vet the Sponsor
The structure's simple. The risk is the sponsor. A bad GP can lose your money; a good one can 2x it. Next episode we're breaking down how to separate the pros from the amateurs — contracts, track record, red flags. You're putting your capital in someone else's hands. Due diligence matters. Wrong sponsor? Wiped out. Right one? Portfolio game-changer. We'll give you the framework to tell the difference. Episode 70.
That's Episode 69. You're not locked out — just one check away from the table. We'll see you next time.
Cash flow is what's left in your pocket after a rental pays all its expenses — including the mortgage. NOI minus debt service. What actually hits your bank account each month or year.
Read definition →House hacking is living in one unit of a multi-unit property (or renting rooms in a single-family) while tenants pay most or all of your mortgage — turning your housing cost into an investment.
Read definition →ROI (return on investment) is the percentage you earn when you divide your profit by the total amount you invested—for every dollar you put in, how many cents come back.
Read definition →A contractor is a professional responsible for performing or coordinating construction, renovation, or repair work — the person who turns your rehab costs into finished product.
Read definition →An increase in property value created directly by the investor through renovations, operational improvements, or rent increases — as opposed to passive market appreciation that happens over time without intervention.
Read definition →



