Using a 70/30 split (70% to investors/LPs, 30% to the sponsor/GP) as your “common denominator” is a very standard and defensible strategy for real estate crowdfunding. In fact, it is often viewed as the “sweet spot” for middle-market deals.

​However, while 70/30 is a common benchmark, it rarely exists in a vacuum. To make it your “standard,” you have to decide if it is a Straight Split or a Waterfall Split.

​1. The Two Ways to Use 70/30

StructureHow it worksMarket Perception
Straight SplitAll cash from day one is split 70/30. No one gets paid until there is profit.Aggressive for GP. Investors usually prefer a “Preferred Return” first.
Waterfall SplitInvestors get a Preferred Return (e.g., 8%) first, then remaining profits are split 70/30.Industry Standard. This is very common for value-add deals.

2. Why 70/30 is a Strong “Common Denominator”

  • Market Alignment: Most crowdfunding platforms (like CrowdStreet or RealtyMogul) see deals ranging from 80/20 to 70/30. By choosing 70/30, you are offering a competitive but sponsor-friendly deal.
  • Scalability: A 30% “promote” (GP share) gives you enough overhead to pay your team, overhead, and acquisition costs while still leaving plenty of “meat on the bone” for investors.
  • Simplified Marketing: If every deal you put out has the same 70/30 split, your repeat investors don’t have to re-learn your math every time. It builds a “brand” of consistency.

​3. When to Deviate from the 70/30

​While it’s great as a baseline, you may need to adjust based on the risk profile of the specific deal:

  • Lower the GP share (e.g., 80/20): If the deal is “Core” or “Core Plus” (low risk, stable apartment building in a prime city). Investors expect more of the equity because the GP’s “hustle” is lower.
  • Increase the GP share (e.g., 60/40 or 50/50): If you hit an “outperformance hurdle.” For example, you could stay 70/30 until the investors hit a 15% IRR, then shift to 50/50 for any “excess” profit. This rewards you for being a hero.

​Summary of a “Standard” 70/30 Offering

​If you want a “plug-and-play” model for your crowdfunding deals, this is the most common configuration:

  1. 8% Preferred Return: Investors get the first 8% of annual cash flow.
  2. 100% Return of Capital: Investors get their initial principal back during a sale or refi.
  3. 70/30 Split: All remaining profit is split 70% to LPs and 30% to you.

Would you like me to draft a sample “Distribution Summary” paragraph that you could use in a pitch deck or investor teaser for this 70/30 model?