Key Takeaways:
Residential rentals are squeezed
Average profit is only about $713/month per house.
Rising interest, insurance, and maintenance costs are outpacing rent growth.
~80% of landlords self‑manage, effectively creating a low‑pay second job.
Residential is hard to scale
Short 12‑month leases mean constant turnover and risk of bad tenants.
Property value is based on comparable sales, so you’re largely “praying for appreciation” and dependent on neighbors and timing.
Commercial real estate advantages
With triple net (NNN) leases, tenants often pay taxes, insurance, and maintenance.
Longer leases (3–10+ years) with built‑in rent bumps = more stable, predictable income.
Forced appreciation: raising rents or filling vacancies directly increases value via higher NOI.
Better tenants, better risk profile
Tenants are businesses, not individuals: rent is a business expense.
You can get financials, personal guarantees, and corporate backing, and freely say no to weak applicants.
Same purchase price, very different returns
A $500k house example: ~$45/month net, ~0.4% cash‑on‑cash.
A $500k small NNN commercial building example: ~$825/month net, ~7.9% cash‑on‑cash, plus upside from forced appreciation.
Transition strategy
Don’t fire‑sale your portfolio; stop buying new weak residential deals.
Sell problem properties first, use 1031 exchanges into small commercial buildings.
Start with smaller commercial deals ($300k–$1M) to learn and scale.