In real estate crowdfunding, a 60/40 equity split (60% to Limited Partners/Shareholders, 40% to the General Partner) is possible, but it is considered quite aggressive in favor of the GP.
In a standard 4- to 5-year “value-add” or “opportunistic” deal, a more common split is 70/30 or 80/20. However, the “fairness” of a 60/40 split depends entirely on how the Waterfall Structure is built.
1. How the “Split” Usually Works
In most professional syndications, the split isn’t applied to every dollar from day one. Instead, it follows a “waterfall” where different tiers of profit are distributed based on performance hurdles.
- Tier 1 (Preferred Return): Investors (LPs) usually receive 100% of the cash flow until they hit a “Pref” (typically 7%–10% annually).
- Tier 2 (Return of Capital): Investors receive 100% of proceeds until their initial investment is fully paid back.
- Tier 3 (The Split/Promote): Only after the first two tiers are met do the profits get split. This is where your 60/40 comes in.
2. When is 60/40 “Normal”?
A 40% “promote” (GP share) is typically reserved for high-performance scenarios or specific types of deals:
- High IRR Hurdles: The GP might only get 40% if they achieve an exceptionally high return for you first (e.g., after you have already made a 15% or 18% IRR).
- Ground-up Development: If the GP is taking on massive risk by building from scratch, they may negotiate a higher split.
- GP Co-Investment: If the GP is putting up a significant amount of their own cash (e.g., 20% of the total equity), a higher total share is more justifiable.
3. Key Questions to Ask
If you are looking at a 60/40 deal, check the Private Placement Memorandum (PPM) for these details:
| Feature | What to look for |
|---|---|
| Preferred Return | Is there a “Pref”? If there is no preferred return and the GP takes 40% of the first dollar, that is very unfavorable to investors. |
| Catch-up Clause | Does the GP have a “catch-up”? This allows them to quickly grab a large chunk of profit once you hit your Pref to reach their 40% share sooner. |
| Fees | High splits (40%) combined with high fees (2% asset management, 3% acquisition) can significantly erode your actual take-home return. |
Summary
A 60/40 split is legal and possible, but it is on the higher end of GP compensation. If the deal is a standard apartment renovation (Value-Add) over 5 years, a 40% promote to the GP without a very high hurdle (like 15%+ IRR) would be considered “expensive” for the shareholders.
Would you like me to help you calculate what your actual (net) return might look like under a 60/40 split compared to a more standard 70/30 structure?