Multifamily Underwriting 101: The Complete 2026 Guide
This guide is the definitive introduction to multifamily underwriting. The difference between investors who build generational wealth and those who get burned almost always comes down to underwriting. Not luck. Not timing. Not connections. Underwriting.
I learned this the hard way. In 2008, I lost $50 million. It was mostly because I got sloppy with my assumptions. I fell in love with deals. I should have let the numbers decide. That experience changed how I analyze every deal. It’s why I see underwriting as the most important skill in multifamily investing.
Whether you have never analyzed an apartment deal, you can learn this. If you want to refresh the basics, you can do that too. You will learn how to evaluate any property with confidence. When you’re ready to run the numbers yourself, use our free multifamily deal analyzer to apply everything in this guide instantly.
|
Underwriting is the process of analyzing a property’s financial performance to determine whether it meets your investment criteria. It’s how you separate genuine opportunities from deals that only look good on the surface.
In multifamily real estate, underwriting answers three fundamental questions:
The seller’s pro forma is a marketing document, not a financial analysis. It’s designed to make the property look as attractive as possible. Your job as an underwriter is to reconstruct reality using conservative assumptions backed by real market data.
|
Single-family homes are valued by comparable sales, which means what similar houses nearby sold for. Multifamily properties are valued by income. That one difference changes everything.
Commercial and multifamily valuation is driven by Net Operating Income (NOI) divided by the market capitalization rate:
Property Value = NOI ÷ Cap Rate
This means you, the investor, have direct control over your property’s value. Every operational improvement that increases NOI creates a multiplied increase in value. That’s the core of value-add multifamily investing, and it’s why the underwriting must be precise.
A $10,000 annual increase in NOI in a 6% cap rate market adds $167,000 in property value. Get the NOI wrong by even a modest margin and your valuation swings by hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The maximum annual rental income the property would generate if 100% occupied at full market rents. This is your starting point; the ceiling on income before any vacancy or loss is applied.
GPR minus vacancy and credit loss, plus any ancillary income (laundry, parking, storage, pet fees). This is the realistic income the property actually collects.
EGI = GPR − Vacancy & Credit Loss + Other Income
The single most important metric in multifamily underwriting. NOI is EGI minus all operating expenses (excluding debt service, depreciation, and capital expenditures). It measures the property’s profitability independent of how you financed it.
NOI = EGI − Operating Expenses
NOI is what lenders use to size your loan, what appraisers use to determine value, and what you use to compare opportunities across markets.
The ratio of NOI to property value. Use our free cap rate calculator to run this instantly on any deal. Cap rate tells you the property’s unleveraged yield, which is what you’d earn if you bought it with all cash.
Cap Rate = NOI ÷ Property Value × 100
In 2026, national multifamily cap rates averaged about 5.0% to 5.1% in primary markets. Secondary and tertiary markets range from 6% to 9%. The ‘right’ cap rate depends on your market, asset class, and investment goals.
The ratio of NOI to annual debt service (mortgage payments). DSCR tells lenders whether the property generates enough income to cover its loan payments. Most commercial lenders require a minimum DSCR of 1.20x–1.25x.
DSCR = NOI ÷ Annual Debt Service
A DSCR of 1.25x means the property generates 25% more income than needed to cover the mortgage. If your underwritten NOI does not support the required DSCR at your target loan amount, lower your purchase price. Or, improve your value-add plan to deliver stronger results.
Measures the annual cash flow return relative to your actual equity invested. Unlike cap rate, CoC accounts for financing, so it reflects your real, leveraged return.
CoC = Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow ÷ Total Cash Invested
Most experienced multifamily investors target 8%–12% cash-on-cash in today’s market. Below 6% and the deal may not justify the risk relative to alternatives.
The annualized total return across the full hold period — including cash flow, principal paydown, and sale proceeds. IRR is the most comprehensive performance metric for comparing deals with different timelines. Target 12%–18%+ for value-add multifamily in most markets.
Total cash returned to you (distributions + sale proceeds) divided by your total equity invested. An equity multiple of 2.0x means you doubled your money. Simple and powerful when communicating returns to passive investors.
For a full walkthrough with worked examples and downloadable templates, see our complete step-by-step multifamily underwriting guide. Here’s the framework:
Never underwrite from the offering memorandum alone. Request:
|
Pull the rent roll. For each unit type, record the current rent. Compare it to market rents using recent comparable lease data from CoStar, Apartments.com, or local property managers.
Knowing how to find and analyze multifamily deals starts with accurate rent data. Use multiple sources and never rely on the seller’s market rent claims without independent verification.
Starting from GPR, work down to EGI:
| Pro Tip
Model income conservatively. Underwrite at current market rents, not the top of what you think the market could bear. Your upside is the buffer, not your baseline assumption. |
This is where most rookie underwriters go wrong. Expense ratios for multifamily typically run 40%–55% of EGI depending on property class, age, and management quality.
Every expense category to model:
Do not include debt service, depreciation, income taxes, or capital expenditures in operating expenses. NOI is a pre-financing, pre-CapEx metric.
With EGI and operating expenses established, calculate NOI. Then determine value using the local market cap rate:
Estimated Value = NOI ÷ Market Cap Rate
This tells you what the property is worth at its current performance. It also shows what it could be worth after you complete your improvement plan. This is critical for value-add deals.
Use our free multifamily deal analyzer to calculate NOI, cap rate, and estimated value automatically. No spreadsheet required.
Once you know your NOI and estimated value, model the debt. Use the capital stack framework to structure senior debt, preferred equity (if applicable), and your equity position.
For syndicated deals where you raise LP capital, model LP returns and GP returns separately.
Include the preferred return and profit split for LPs.
Include the acquisition fee and promote for GPs.
This helps confirm the deal structure is fair to all parties.
The most important step that most investors skip. Run three scenarios:
If the deal breaks in the downside scenario, you’re taking on more risk than the returns justify. The best multifamily investments generate acceptable returns even in stressed conditions.
Understanding how lenders think about underwriting is essential to structuring deals that actually get financed. For a deep dive, read our guide to how a lender underwrites a multifamily loan request.
Commercial lenders evaluate four primary factors:
Lenders use your underwritten NOI, not the seller’s pro forma, to determine how much they’ll lend. If your stabilized NOI at a 1.25x DSCR supports a $2M loan but you need $2.5M to close, the deal doesn’t work at your price.
Most commercial lenders cap LTV at 70%–75% for multifamily acquisitions. Agency lenders (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac) may allow up to 75%–80% on stabilized assets. The lower of the DSCR test or LTV test determines your actual loan amount.
Lenders evaluate your experience, net worth, and liquidity. For larger loans, they often require net worth equal to the loan amount and post-closing liquidity of 10% of the loan. A strong personal financial statement is your financial handshake with the lender — it should be current, detailed, and professionally prepared.
Lenders assess the submarket: population trends, employment base, rent growth trajectory, and supply pipeline. A 200-unit building in a declining tertiary market faces more scrutiny than an equivalent asset in a high-growth submarket, regardless of the NOI.
| Agency vs. Bridge Financing
Stabilized deals typically use agency financing (Fannie/Freddie) with long terms and low rates. Value-add acquisitions often need bridge loans. These are short-term loans with higher rates. They fund the purchase and rehab work. Later, the loan is refinanced into permanent debt after the property stabilizes. |
Value-add underwriting requires modeling two distinct financial pictures: the property as-is, and the property at stabilization. For a complete breakdown of what qualifies as a genuine value-add opportunity vs. marketing hype, and proven strategies to increase NOI, those guides go deep on execution.
In your underwriting model, you need to account for:
| Metric | As-Is (at Acquisition) | Stabilized (Pro Forma) |
|---|---|---|
| GPR | $480,000 | $600,000 |
| Vacancy (7%) | −$33,600 | −$42,000 |
| Other Income | $12,000 | $18,000 |
| EGI | $458,400 | $576,000 |
| Operating Expenses (45%) | −$206,280 | −$259,200 |
| NOI | $252,120 | $316,800 |
| Cap Rate (6.5%) | Value: $3.88M | Value: $4.87M |
| Value Creation | — | +$990,000 |
Sellers routinely present expense ratios of 30%–35% on Class B and C properties. Realistic expense ratios for these asset classes are 45%–55%. Always rebuild expenses from scratch using market data, actual utility bills, and real management quotes.
You can’t raise every tenant’s rent on day one. Leases have terms. Underwrite rent growth at lease rollover, not immediately at closing. Model realistic lease rollover timelines and tenant retention rates.
Deferred maintenance is often the reason a property is priced attractively. Get a full property inspection and professional systems reports (roof, HVAC, plumbing, electrical) before closing. Incomplete due diligence is one of the most expensive mistakes in multifamily investing.
Capital expenditures — major repairs and improvements outside of routine operations — are not included in NOI but they are very real costs. Budget $3,000–$10,000+ per unit for value-add renovations depending on scope, and maintain a CapEx reserve even for stabilized deals.
Deals that only work under best-case assumptions will fail in real market conditions. Always run a downside scenario before committing. If the deal can’t survive vacancy 5% above your base case and flat rent growth, you’re taking on uncompensated risk.
Your returns depend heavily on what you sell the property for — and at what cap rate. Underwriting an aggressive exit cap rate (assuming you’ll sell at a compressed cap) is one of the most common ways investors manufacture returns that don’t actually materialize. Be conservative on your exit assumptions.
At minimum: the rent roll, trailing 12-month (T-12) income and expense statement, and prior 2–3 years of operating statements. Include property tax bills, insurance bills, and utility bills. For value-add deals, also request any capital expenditure records and deferred maintenance reports.
Class A properties: 35%–45% of EGI. Class B properties: 45%–52%. Class C properties: 50%–58%. Any seller claiming expense ratios below 35% on a B or C asset needs careful review. The expenses are almost always understated.
Use CoStar, Marcus & Millichap market reports, or CBRE research for cap rate data by submarket and asset class. Our guide to multifamily cap rates by city covers 2026 benchmarks across major U.S. markets.
A quick screening underwrite should take 15-30 minutes with a good tool. A full investment underwrite for a 50–200 unit property usually takes 4-8 hours of focused work. It includes document checks and scenario modeling.
For initial deal screening, our free multifamily deal analyzer handles the core metrics instantly — no spreadsheet required. For full investment underwriting and presenting to lenders or investors, a more detailed model (Excel-based or purpose-built software) is recommended.
Lenders order an independent appraisal and conduct their own underwriting analysis using the T-12 and rent roll. They compare your assumptions against their internal benchmarks and market data. Read our full guide on how lenders underwrite a multifamily loan. Learn what they look for. Also learn how to structure your deal package to get approved.
Underwriting is a financial analysis. It answers, “Do the numbers work?” Due diligence is a verification process. It confirms the numbers you underwrote match reality. Both are essential. Learn more in our comprehensive guide to multifamily due diligence.
Underwriting is a skill that compounds with repetition. The investors who succeed in multifamily analyze dozens, sometimes hundreds, of deals before closing their first. Every deal you underwrite sharpens your pattern recognition and builds the instinct to spot real opportunities fast.
Here’s how to take your underwriting to the next level:
| From Rod
Great underwriting isn’t about being pessimistic. It’s about being honest. When you review enough deals with clear eyes and cautious assumptions, real opportunities stand out. They still work when you stress test them. That’s the deal you want. That’s the deal that creates lifetime cash flow. |
Disclaimer: This article was written with the help of AI and reviewed by Rod and his team.
At one point, Michelle and her husband were doing everything they could just to stay afloat. They had downsized into a tiny...
Blog Posts Archives UnfavoriteFavorite April 1, 2026 Economic Opportunities Program The Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program advances strategies, policies, and...
A new House Judiciary Committee report finds that the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), known as the Match, operates as...