Demystifying the Preferred Return
A visual guide for real estate investors on how profit distributions are structured and prioritized.
What is a Preferred Return?
A preferred return, or "pref," is a foundational concept in real estate partnerships. It's not a guarantee of payment, but a priority claim on profits. It ensures that passive investors (Limited Partners) receive a predetermined rate of return on their capital before the active manager (General Partner) earns their share of the upside, known as the "promote."
This mechanism aligns the interests of both parties: investors get a layer of downside protection, and managers are incentivized to make the project profitable.
Typical Annual Rate
This is the common range for preferred returns, with the exact rate depending on the project's risk profile and market conditions.
The Key Players & Capital Structure
Limited Partners (LPs)
The passive investors who provide the majority of the equity capital (typically 80-95%). Their involvement is primarily financial.
The preferred return is designed to protect and prioritize their investment.
Typical Equity Contribution Split
General Partners (GPs)
The active managers or "sponsors" who find, manage, and execute the business plan. They typically invest 5-20% of the equity.
They earn their "promote" only after the LPs' preferred return is paid.
How It Works: The Equity Waterfall
Cash flow is distributed in a strict sequence of tiers. Like a waterfall, each tier must be completely filled before cash "spills over" to the next.
Preferred Return
100% of distributable cash flow goes to the Limited Partners (LPs) until their preferred return (e.g., 8% annually) is fully paid.
Return of Capital
Next, all cash flow is used to repay the initial capital contributions of all partners, often paid pro-rata (in proportion to their investment).
GP Catch-Up
The General Partner (GP) may receive a higher portion of profits until they have "caught up" to a certain return level, aligning their earnings with the LPs' initial pref.
The Promote (Profit Split)
Once all prior tiers are satisfied, remaining profits are split between LPs and the GP. This is the GP's primary incentive. A common split starts at 80% for LPs and 20% for the GP, often shifting more towards the GP as higher performance hurdles are met.
Deconstructing the "Pref": Key Characteristics
Cumulative vs. Non-Cumulative
This determines what happens if the preferred return isn't met in a given period.
✅ Cumulative
Any unpaid portion accrues and is carried forward. This "pref accrual" must be paid before the GP sees any promote. This is the industry standard and offers strong investor protection.
❌ Non-Cumulative
Unpaid amounts are forfeited forever. This is rare and offers significantly less protection to investors.
Simple vs. Compounding Interest
This defines how accrued, unpaid returns are calculated over time.
🔹 Simple Interest
The return is always calculated on the original capital invested. Unpaid accruals are owed but do not earn interest themselves. This is the most common method.
✨ Compounding Interest
Unpaid accruals are added to the capital balance, meaning the unpaid amount also starts earning the pref. This is less common but more lucrative for investors if shortfalls occur.
Market Benchmarks: A Typical Deal Structure
Distribution of Common Pref Rates
While rates vary, industry data shows clear preferences. An 8% pref is the most common benchmark.
Common Promote Split Hurdles
Profit splits change as the deal performs better, typically measured by the Internal Rate of Return (IRR).