Multifamily
Brokers who live on rent rolls and T-12s.
Find verified multifamily brokers for small (5–24 unit), mid-market, and institutional apartment deals — with the underwriting, diligence, and capital relationships to execute.
Browse multifamily brokers →01
Small, mid-market, and institutional multifamily.
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Cap-rate, NOI, and T-12 underwriting on every deal.
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Rent-roll, lease, and operating-expense diligence.
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Relationships with agency, bridge, and private capital lenders.
Browse every real-estate specialty
RealtorsLicensed residential agents and Realtors.BrokersReal-estate brokers and brokerage principals.Luxury AgentsSpecialists in high-end and luxury properties.Commercial AgentsOffice, retail, industrial, and investment property.Property ManagersResidential and commercial property management.Mortgage ProfessionalsLoan officers, mortgage brokers, and lenders.Real-Estate AttorneysClosings, title, contracts, and disputes.Home InspectorsPre-purchase and pre-listing inspections.
Frequently asked questions
- What counts as multifamily?
- Two-to-four-unit residential properties are typically financed and brokered as residential. Five units and above is commercial multifamily — different lending, different underwriting, different brokers.
- Do I need a commercial broker for 5+ units?
- Yes. Commercial multifamily trades on cap rate, NOI, T-12 financials, and rent rolls. Use a broker whose book is multifamily, not a residential agent moonlighting on a fourplex.
- What documents should I expect during diligence?
- Trailing-12 operating statements, rent roll, leases, service contracts, capex history, utility bills, and a property condition assessment. Your broker should request all of it before you submit a letter of intent.
- How are multifamily brokers paid?
- Sales commission on the purchase price, typically 1–4% depending on deal size — smaller deals carry higher percentages. Larger institutional deals often use flat-fee or sliding-scale structures.