Calculate syndication returns for LPs and GPs: preferred return, promote splits, and residual distributions. Model waterfall structures for your deal.
Real estate syndication is a structure where a general partner (GP/sponsor) pools capital from limited partners (LPs/investors) to acquire and operate larger properties that no single investor could afford alone. Returns are distributed through a waterfall structure that typically includes a preferred return to LPs, a GP promote (carried interest), and profit splits at various tiers.
This calculator models the economics of a syndication deal from both the LP and GP perspective. Enter the total equity raised, the preferred return rate, the GP promote structure, and projected cash flow and sale proceeds. The tool shows projected annual distributions, equity multiple, and IRR for each party.
Understanding syndication economics is essential for both sponsors structuring deals and investors evaluating offerings. A deal that sounds attractive at "8% preferred return plus 70/30 split" may look different when you model the actual distributions over a 5-year hold period.
Homebuyers, investors, and real-estate professionals all benefit from precise real estate syndication returns figures when evaluating properties, negotiating deals, or planning long-term investment strategies. Save this calculator and revisit it whenever market conditions or your financial situation changes.
Syndication terms can be complex and opaque. This calculator makes the math transparent, showing exactly how much LPs and GPs earn under different scenarios. Sponsors can use it to structure fair deals; investors can use it to evaluate offerings. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis.
LP Preferred Return = LP Equity × Pref Rate Excess Cash Flow = Total Distributions − Preferred Return GP Promote = Excess × Promote % LP Total = Preferred Return + (Excess − GP Promote) Equity Multiple = Total Distributions / Equity Invested
Result: LP equity multiple = 1.87x | GP total = $261,000
LPs invest $900,000, GP invests $100,000. Annual cash flow of $100,000: LPs receive 8% pref ($72,000), remaining $28,000 split 70/30. Over 5 years plus $1.5M sale, LP total is ~$1,687,000 (1.87x), GP total is ~$261,000 including promote and equity share.
Syndication returns follow a waterfall structure. First, cash flow is used to pay the preferred return to LPs. Any excess is split between LPs and the GP according to the promote structure. At sale, the same waterfall applies to the disposition proceeds after returning invested capital.
LPs typically earn 12–18% IRR on well-executed syndications, with equity multiples of 1.5–2.0x over 3–5 years. GPs earn a disproportionate share through the promote — a GP who invests 10% of equity might receive 25–35% of total profits. This is the incentive for the GP to perform.
Beyond the equity split, sponsors charge fees: acquisition fees (1–2%), asset management fees (1–2% of revenue), refinance fees (0.5–1%), and disposition fees (1–2%). These reduce LP returns and should be factored into your analysis. The best sponsors earn their returns from the promote, not fees.
A syndication is a partnership where a sponsor (GP) identifies, acquires, and manages a property, while investors (LPs) provide most of the capital. The GP handles operations and earns a promote (share of profits above the preferred return). LPs are passive investors who earn returns based on the deal's performance.
A preferred return (pref) is a minimum return paid to LPs before the GP receives any promote. For example, an 8% pref means LPs receive 8% annually on their invested capital before the GP shares in profits. It protects investors by ensuring they earn a baseline return.
A promote (also called carried interest) is the GP's share of profits above the preferred return. In a typical structure with a 30% promote, the GP receives 30% of all profits after LPs have received their preferred return. This incentivizes the GP to maximize returns.
Common structures are 70/30 or 80/20 LP/GP profit splits after the preferred return. The GP typically invests 5–10% of total equity. A deal with an 8% pref and 70/30 split means LPs get 8% first, then remaining profits are split 70% to LPs and 30% to the GP.
Look at four metrics: projected IRR (annualized return), equity multiple (total return / invested capital), preferred return rate, and the GP's track record. Also evaluate the market, property quality, business plan, and fee structure. Always model downside scenarios.
Most value-add apartment syndications target 3–7 year holds. Shorter holds (3–4 years) suit properties with quick value-add opportunities. Longer holds (5–7 years) work for stabilized assets with steady cash flow. Holding periods affect IRR significantly.