How to Vet a Multifamily Mentor: 2026 Checklist
I have watched people hand over $30,000, $50,000, even six figures to the wrong mentor. They do not usually lose that money because the mentor was a fraud. They lose it because they never ran real due diligence before they paid. You would never buy a 100-unit apartment building without inspecting the roof, pulling the T12, and talking to the current tenants. A mentorship program deserves the same scrutiny, and most people skip it.
This post gives you the exact filter I wish every aspiring multifamily investor ran before they picked a coach, a mastermind, or a mentorship program. It is built around 25 years of watching students succeed, and honestly, watching some of them waste money with the wrong fit.
Most people compare mentors on price. That is the wrong axis.
A $25,000 program that gets you into your first 80-unit deal inside 12 months is free. A $3,000 program that teaches you nothing you could not find on a podcast is expensive. What you are really buying is access, feedback on your actual deals, introductions to capital and brokers, and accountability when you want to quit. None of those things show up on a sales page.
When I got wiped out in 2008, I had 800 single-family homes and no one in my corner who had been through a downturn at scale. If I had spent real money on the right mentor earlier, I would have skipped the worst chapter of my life. That lesson is the reason I take this seriously. You should too.
Investors are comparing mentors aggressively right now, searching “are the seminars worth it,” “success rates,” and “student reviews” more than ever. The programs that win are the ones that make it easy to verify their claims. Your job as the buyer is to force that verification before you pay.
Here is the exact checklist I would run if I were evaluating any multifamily mentor tomorrow. Every filter has a clear pass or fail. If a mentor fails three of these, walk away. If they fail one of the first three, run.
Has the mentor actually bought, operated, and ideally sold multifamily assets? Not just “invested passively.” Not just “taught” it. Actually signed on loans, hired property management, and handled a bad tenant, a bad quarter, and a bad year.
How to verify: ask for specific deal examples with property addresses, unit counts, purchase dates, and current or exit status. Real operators can answer this in thirty seconds. If the answer is vague, that is your answer.
Has the mentor invested through more than one market cycle? If the only thing they know is the 2012 to 2021 bull run, they do not have anything to teach you about underwriting today.
I rode multifamily from 2001 into 2008, watched the crash, and rebuilt. Cycle experience is the difference between a mentor who teaches you to underwrite with a realistic exit cap and one who still models 3 percent rent growth forever.
Ask a direct question. “How many students have closed their first deal in the last 24 months? What unit counts? Can I talk to three of them who are not on your testimonial page?”
A legitimate program will have this data and will connect you with unbiased alumni. A weak program will deflect. Our community has 2,604 student-owned units tracked through case studies and 343-plus documented deals, which is the kind of number you should ask any program to produce. If they cannot, that is a filter failure.
What, specifically, do you get? How many live calls per week or month? Is there deal review? Is there underwriting feedback on a real deal you bring? Are there small-group accountability pods, or is it one giant Zoom and a Facebook group?
“Access to a community” is not a curriculum. Get it in writing.
This one is underrated. Multifamily is 80 percent psychology. If a mentor teaches tactics only, you will learn how to run the numbers but you will quit the first time a broker ghosts you or a deal falls through.
A serious mentor addresses fear, goal-setting, limiting beliefs, and the mental game of staying in the fight long enough to win. If the curriculum has zero mindset content, that is a gap you will pay for later.
Mentorship is not a classroom. It is a doorway. Who will you meet? What brokers, lenders, sponsors, and capital partners are inside the community? Who has raised capital from who?
Ask this directly: “If I show up with a signed LOI next month, what does your community do for me?” A weak program will hand-wave. A real one can name three specific things.
Is the mentor still actively investing alongside students, or are they fully retired from deals and selling education only? Neither is automatically wrong, but you need to know. If they are still investing, there is skin in the game. If they have pivoted fully to teaching, ask how they stay current on underwriting, financing, and market conditions.
Some behaviors are deal-breakers. If you see any of these on a strategy call, thank them for their time and leave.
You are evaluating a business relationship. Treat the sales call like you would treat a partner interview. Anyone who flinches at that is the wrong partner.
The opposite list matters too. These are the signals I would look for:
Put every mentor you are considering into a simple scorecard. Here is the exact format I recommend:
| Filter | Mentor A | Mentor B | Mentor C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Years actively operating multifamily | |||
| Units currently owned or GP’d on | |||
| Cycles invested through (2008, 2020, 2022-24) | |||
| Students with verified first deal closed in last 24 months | |||
| Live coaching calls per month | |||
| Personal deal-review on your underwriting (Y/N) | |||
| Access to capital partners inside community (Y/N) | |||
| Mindset curriculum included (Y/N) | |||
| Alumni you can speak with before paying (# offered) | |||
| Clear refund or satisfaction policy (Y/N) | |||
| Price (one-time vs. recurring) | |||
| Program length |
Fill this in for every mentor. Do not go by the feeling you got on the strategy call. Go by the rows. The right mentor stands out on paper, not on vibes.
Bring this list to every mentorship sales call. Write down the answers word for word.
Question 10 is my favorite. A good mentor will answer it honestly. A weak one will dodge.
Every claim can be checked. Here is how.
I have a dedicated page addressing the tough questions about my own programs. That is the model to look for in any mentor you are considering. The willingness to answer hard questions in public is a proxy for the willingness to answer them privately when you are a student.
People use these words interchangeably. They should not. Match the format to where you actually are.
| Format | Best For | Typical Investment | What You Get |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bootcamp or intensive event | You have read the book, listened to podcasts, and need a structured weekend to see if multifamily is right for you | $97 to $1,500 | 2-3 days of teaching, networking, a clear framework, sometimes access to the mentor’s ecosystem afterward |
| Group mentorship program | You have decided multifamily is your vehicle and you want a 12+ month container to close your first deal | $10,000 to $60,000 | Ongoing calls, deal review, community, accountability, capital connections |
| Mastermind (peer group) | You already own multifamily and want to scale faster with operators at or above your level | $15,000 to $75,000+ per year | Peer group, high-level strategy, partnerships, not beginner curriculum |
| 1-on-1 coaching | You have a specific operational problem (turnaround, capital raise, exit) and need a senior operator for direct advice | Varies widely | Personalized attention, limited curriculum |
If you are new, start with a bootcamp before you commit to a mentorship. Our bootcamp is designed exactly for this reason. It lets you sample the teaching, meet the community, and make an informed decision about the deeper program. A mentor who does not offer a lower-stakes entry point is asking you to make a big commitment on a small information set. That is a bad trade.
Here is the math that actually matters.
If a mentorship costs $35,000, and it gets you into one 60-unit deal at a 20 percent GP equity position with $500,000 in cash flow and appreciation over a 5-year hold, the mentorship paid for itself roughly 14 times. That is the math you should run before the emotional math of “this feels expensive.”
But it only works if the mentor actually helps you close. That is why the filters above are not optional. You are not buying access to information. You are buying the probability of a closed deal and the confidence to keep going through the three or four broken escrows you will have before that first deal closes.
Our community tracks real outcomes. Jennifer Barner came through the early programs, scaled to more than 1,200 units, and put all four of her kids through college debt-free. Anthony closed a 218-unit deal as his first deal with no money and no prior real estate experience. Loren went from bootcamp to resigning from his job inside 12 months. These are not typical results, but they are possible results, and they exist because the vetting, on their end, matched the mentorship, on ours.
If you want to get specific about your own numbers, grab our free book here. Run your own math. Then vet the mentor. Then decide.
For a deeper dive on how to educate yourself and screen mentorships, I wrote a full breakdown on what finding mentorship for multifamily actually looks like. Read it before your next strategy call. And for the broader education roadmap, here is the complete beginner’s guide. For ongoing free education, the Lifetime Cashflow podcast is where I interview operators every week and you can hear how they think before you ever pay a dollar.
Q: How do I vet a multifamily real estate mentor?
A: Verify three things first: their operator track record with specific properties and dates, their cycle experience (especially 2008 and 2020-2024), and their student outcomes with names and deal sizes. Then look at teaching structure, mindset integration, network access, and incentive alignment. Run all seven filters before you consider price.
Q: What questions should I ask before joining a multifamily mentorship program?
A: Ask how many units they currently own, their worst deal story, student close rates in the last 12 months, whether you can speak to three alumni not on their site, refund policy, and what specifically you get beyond books and podcasts. The answer to “what mistakes do students make in your program?” is especially revealing.
Q: How much should a multifamily real estate mentorship cost?
A: Group mentorship programs typically range from $10,000 to $60,000. Bootcamps and weekend intensives run $97 to $1,500. Masterminds for active operators run $15,000 to $75,000+ per year. Price alone is not the signal. The ratio of price to proven student outcomes is.
Q: Are multifamily real estate mentorship programs worth it?
A: They can be, if you pick the right one and do the work. Worth it means the program reliably shortens your time to first deal and improves the quality of that first deal. That only happens when the mentor has real operating experience, real student outcomes, and real feedback on your actual deals.
Q: What are red flags when choosing a multifamily mentor?
A: Pressure to buy on the first call, refusal to connect you with alumni, guaranteed returns, no verifiable track record, proprietary curriculum you cannot see until you pay, no acknowledgement of risk or failed deals, and heavy emotional selling without real math.
Q: Can I succeed in multifamily investing without a mentor?
A: Yes, and some people have. But you will take longer, make more expensive mistakes, and have fewer capital partners. A good mentor compresses years into months because they have already made the mistakes you would make.
Q: How long should a multifamily mentorship program last?
A: A minimum of 12 months is reasonable for a first-deal-focused program. First deals often take 9 to 18 months from decision to close. A program that ends at 90 days is usually too short unless it is specifically a focused bootcamp or a refresher.
Q: What is the difference between a mentor and a mastermind?
A: A mentor teaches you their system and provides feedback on your execution. A mastermind is a peer group of operators at or above your level who share strategy, deals, and partnerships. Beginners need a mentor first. Experienced operators benefit from a mastermind.
Q: How do I verify a multifamily mentor’s track record?
A: Check public property records for deal addresses they claim, search LinkedIn for alumni and current employees, look for interviews on podcasts they do not own, check SEC EDGAR for Form D filings if they syndicate, and read critical reviews on Reddit and YouTube.
Q: Should a multifamily mentor still be actively investing?
A: Ideally yes, or they should be clearly transparent that they have pivoted to teaching and explain how they stay current on markets, underwriting, and financing. A mentor who stopped investing in 2018 and has not adjusted their teaching for current interest rates is teaching you an outdated playbook.
The best way to vet any mentor, including me, is to sample their teaching before you commit. Our 3-day multifamily bootcamp is built exactly for this. You see how I teach, meet the community, and make your decision on real information, not a sales page.
Check out the next Multifamily Bootcamp →
Prefer to start free? Download “How to Create Lifetime Cashflow Through Multifamily Properties” and run the math before your next strategy call with anyone.
Disclaimer: This article was written by Rod and reviewed by his team.
LISTEN TO THE PODCAST The Small Business Credit Survey (SBCS) has been administered nationally since 2016 by the 12 Federal Reserve Banks in collaboration...
Home / News / California Tops List of States With Highest Student Aid Fraud at $171 Million Updated: April 16,...
Understanding how unsubsidized student loans work and what they are can help students and families make informed decisions about paying...