Real estate partnerships can be one of the most powerful ways to build wealth — but only when structured correctly. Whether you are teaming up with a business partner, a silent investor, or a fellow real estate professional, understanding the legal, financial, and operational framework before you sign anything is critical. This guide covers everything you need to know about entering a real estate partnership deal.
Why Partner in Real Estate?
Partnerships allow investors to pool capital, share risk, combine skill sets, and scale faster than they could alone. A partner might bring cash while you bring deal-finding expertise. Another may have a contractor network while you handle financing. The key is defining roles and expectations clearly from day one.
Common reasons investors partner:
- Limited personal capital — combining funds to hit a down payment or purchase price
- Skill gaps — one partner handles operations, the other handles finances
- Credit strength — one partner qualifies for better loan terms
- Network access — a partner with contractor or off-market deal relationships
- Risk sharing — distributing exposure across multiple parties
Types of Real Estate Partnerships
Before diving into contracts and finances, understand which partnership structure fits your deal:
1. General Partnership (GP)
All partners share management responsibilities and liabilities equally. Simple to form but risky because each partner can be personally liable for business debts and legal actions. Best for small, trusted partnerships with clear roles.
2. Limited Partnership (LP)
One or more General Partners manage the deal and take on liability. Limited Partners (LPs) invest capital but have no management role and liability is capped at their investment. This is the classic structure in real estate syndications.
3. Limited Liability Company (LLC)
The most popular structure for real estate partnerships today. All members receive liability protection. An LLC operating agreement defines ownership percentages, profit splits, and decision-making authority. Highly flexible and tax-efficient.
4. Joint Venture (JV)
Two or more parties join forces for a single deal or project, then go their separate ways. A JV agreement governs the relationship. No ongoing entity is typically required, though forming an LLC for the JV is common practice.
5. Tenants in Common (TIC)
Each partner holds a fractional ownership interest in a property. Interests can be unequal and can be sold independently. Used frequently in 1031 exchange deals and multi-investor acquisitions.
The Partnership Agreement: What Must Be Included
Never enter a real estate partnership without a written agreement. A handshake deal is a lawsuit waiting to happen. Whether you use an LLC operating agreement, limited partnership agreement, or a JV contract, every partnership document should cover these essential sections:
Ownership Percentages
Clearly state what percentage each partner owns. Ownership does not have to match the profit split. For example, one partner may own 50% of the LLC but only receive 30% of profits because the other partner is providing the bulk of the capital or doing more of the work.
Capital Contributions
Document exactly how much each partner is contributing in cash, credit, labor, or assets. Specify when those contributions are due and what happens if a partner fails to contribute (known as a capital call default provision).
Profit and Loss Distribution
Define how and when profits are distributed. Will profits go out quarterly? After debt service is covered? After a preferred return is paid to capital contributors? The preferred return model — where investors get a set return (e.g., 8% per year) before profits are split — is extremely common in real estate partnerships.
Management and Decision-Making
Specify who manages day-to-day operations and what decisions require unanimous or majority vote. Typical major decisions requiring full partner approval include: selling the property, refinancing, taking on new debt, adding new partners, and major capital expenditures above a threshold dollar amount.
Exit Strategy and Buyout Provisions
What happens when one partner wants to leave? A well-drafted buyout clause (also called a buy-sell or shotgun clause) lays out how a departing partner’s interest is valued and purchased. Common methods include a third-party appraisal, a set formula (e.g., a multiple of NOI), or a right of first refusal for the remaining partners.
Dispute Resolution
Agree in advance on how disputes will be handled — mediation first, then arbitration, or direct litigation. Specifying the governing state law and jurisdiction in the agreement avoids confusion later.
Death, Disability, and Divorce Clauses
What happens to a partner’s interest if they die or become incapacitated? If a partner’s divorce could drag their real estate interest into a settlement? These scenarios must be addressed to prevent outsiders from gaining unwanted control over your deal.
Deal Structure: How to Divide the Numbers
There is no single right way to split a deal. Here are the most common financial structures used in real estate partnerships:
50/50 Split
Equal partners contribute equally (or one brings capital, the other brings sweat equity) and split profits down the middle. Simple but only works when both contributions are truly equal in value.
Preferred Return + Equity Split
The capital contributor receives an 8% preferred return on their invested capital before any profits are split. After the preferred return is paid, remaining profits are split (e.g., 70/30 or 80/20). This is the most common structure in syndications and equity partnerships.
Example: Partner A invests $200,000. Partner B finds and manages the deal. Partner A gets an 8% annual preferred return ($16,000/year) off the top. Remaining cash flow is split 70% to Partner A, 30% to Partner B.
Waterfall Structure
Profits are distributed in tiers (waterfalls). Each tier has a different split that favors capital investors at lower returns and shifts more profit to the deal sponsor as returns increase. Common in larger syndications and private equity deals.
Sweat Equity Agreements
One partner performs the work (finding the deal, managing the renovation, handling leasing) and earns ownership equity in exchange. The sweat equity partner typically receives a smaller ownership percentage upfront that increases as milestones are hit.
Financing a Partnership Deal
How a partnership acquires financing is one of the most critical decisions you will make. There are several key considerations:
Who Signs on the Loan?
Conventional and government-backed loans require personal guarantees. All partners who sign on the mortgage are equally responsible for the debt. This can affect personal credit and debt-to-income ratios. In many deals, only the managing partner or the creditworthy partner signs on the loan while other partners contribute capital but remain off the mortgage.
Commercial vs. Residential Financing
For properties with 1-4 units, conventional residential financing applies. For 5+ units, commercial loans are used and are typically underwritten based on the property’s income (DSCR — Debt Service Coverage Ratio) rather than personal income. Partnerships buying multifamily or commercial properties generally use commercial or portfolio lenders.
DSCR Loans for Partnerships
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) loans are highly popular in real estate partnerships because they qualify based on the property’s cash flow rather than personal income or employment. A DSCR of 1.25 or higher is generally required (meaning the property generates 25% more income than the debt payments).
Private Money and Hard Money
Partnerships often use private lenders or hard money for acquisitions and rehabs, then refinance into long-term financing after a value-add. The private lender may be a third partner in the deal — providing capital in exchange for a fixed interest rate or an equity stake.
Capital Accounts and Partner Contributions
Each partner’s capital account tracks their contributions, distributions, and their share of gains and losses. This matters at tax time and when calculating buyout values. Capital accounts must be meticulously maintained, especially in an LLC taxed as a partnership.
Tax Implications of Real Estate Partnerships
Tax treatment varies significantly based on your partnership structure:
- LLC (taxed as partnership): Income, losses, and deductions pass through to individual partners via a Schedule K-1. Partners pay taxes on their share of income at their individual tax rates.
- Depreciation: Partners can use their share of real estate depreciation to offset other passive income, significantly reducing taxable income.
- Capital gains: When a property is sold, gains are split according to ownership percentages. Long-term capital gains rates apply if the property was held for more than 12 months.
- 1031 Exchanges: If all partners agree to roll the proceeds into a new property, a 1031 exchange can defer capital gains taxes. All partners must be on board — a single dissenting partner cannot be easily bought out without triggering a taxable event.
- Self-employment tax: General partners who actively manage deals may owe self-employment taxes on their partnership income. Limited partners typically do not.
Always work with a CPA who specializes in real estate to structure your partnership tax-efficiently from day one.
Red Flags to Watch For in Any Partnership
Not every partnership is a good one. Here are the warning signs to watch for:
- No written agreement: Any partner who resists putting the deal in writing is a major red flag.
- Misaligned exit strategies: One partner wants to hold for 20 years while the other wants to flip in 12 months — this will end badly without a clear exit clause.
- Unclear capital contributions: Vague promises about how much someone will contribute lead to disputes and shortfalls.
- No track record: Partnering with someone who has never closed a deal before in a leadership role is high risk. Vet your partners thoroughly.
- Lack of defined roles: When nobody knows who is responsible for what, nothing gets done — or two people do the same thing and blame each other.
- No personal liability protection: Operating without an LLC or LP exposes you to unlimited personal liability if the deal goes wrong.
Step-by-Step: How to Enter a Real Estate Partnership Deal
- Define the deal and your roles — What property type? What is each partner’s contribution? Who manages operations?
- Choose your entity structure — Form an LLC, LP, or JV. Do this before you make an offer on a property.
- Draft the partnership agreement — Work with a real estate attorney to draft a comprehensive operating agreement covering all the points listed above.
- Open a dedicated business bank account — All capital contributions and deal cash flows in and out of this account only. Never commingle personal and business funds.
- Secure financing — Determine who signs on the loan, what loan product you are using, and how capital contributions are structured.
- Close the deal — The LLC or partnership entity is named on the title, not individual partners.
- Maintain records — Track capital accounts, distributions, and expenses meticulously. File partnership tax returns (Form 1065) annually and issue K-1s to all partners.
- Plan your exit — Know from day one whether you are holding long-term, doing a value-add and refinance (BRRRR), flipping, or syndicating.
Final Thoughts: Partner Smart, Not Just Fast
A great partner can multiply your results. A bad partnership can destroy your finances, your credit, and your relationships. The Real Estate Sharks always advise: take the time to structure every partnership deal correctly, put everything in writing, and never let excitement override due diligence. The most successful real estate investors build wealth through disciplined partnerships — not rushed ones.
If you are considering entering a real estate partnership and want guidance on structuring the deal, reach out to our team. We are here to help you swim smarter in the deep end of the market.
