Real estate investors flip hundreds of thousands of properties every year. They need reliable, skilled contractors who understand their business model. If you can become the go-to contractor for even a handful of active investors in your area, you’ll have more consistent work than you can handle. Here’s how to break in and stay there.
Why Investors Are Your Best Clients
Unlike retail homeowners who flip out over a $200 cost overrun, experienced real estate investors think in terms of project ROI. They want:
- Predictable bids (they hate surprises more than anything)
- On-time completion (every extra week costs them money)
- Consistent quality that matches the neighborhood (not over-built, not under-built)
- Repeat relationships (they don’t want to find a new contractor every project)
Win on those four things and investors will send you every job they have — and refer you to their investor friends.
Understanding What Inveshow to work with real estate investors contractortors Need in a Bid
Investor bids are different from retail bids. Here’s what investors want to see:
- Line-item detail: Not “kitchen remodel – $15,000” but a breakdown by task, material, and labor
- Scope specificity: Every item that is and isn’t included must be clear
- Timeline: Total project length with weekly milestones
- Payment schedule: Tied to completion milestones, not calendar dates
- Your license and insurance: Investors (and their lenders) require this, no exceptions
How to Price for Investor Jobs
Investors get multiple bids. Being the cheapest rarely wins long-term — reliability does. But you need to be competitive. Tips:
- Know your actual costs per square foot for different scopes (full gut, cosmetic, etc.)
- Price in a 15% contingency buffer for unknowns — especially on older homes
- Don’t under-bid to win the job. Investors hate change orders almost as much as delays.
- Consider offering a discount for volume or repeat work relationships
How to Find Investor Clients
- Local real estate investor meetups (REIAs): These are gold. Show up, network, bring business cards with photos of your completed work.
- Hard money lender networks: Lenders know who’s actively flipping in your area.
- Wholesale Facebook groups: Investors post deals and sometimes ask for contractor recommendations.
- BiggerPockets.com: The biggest real estate investor community online. Create a free profile and participate in local forums.
- Contact real estate agents who specialize in investor clients: They refer contractors constantly.
The #1 Thing That Kills InvLearn how to work with real estate investors as a contractor. Win flip jobs, price correctly, avoid disputes, and build relationships that keep you booked year-round.estor-Contractor Relationships
Scope creep without communication. When you discover additional work that’s needed, call the investor immediately with a written change order before doing the extra work. Investors respect “I found something we need to address, here’s the cost to fix it.” They hate “I did extra work, here’s a bigger bill at the end.”
Building a Long-Term Investor Relationship
The best contractor relationships in real estate are built over years. Protect them by:
- Sending daily or weekly photo updates during the project
- Flagging problems early, not at the end
- Finishing what you committed to on time
- Being available by phone and text (within reason)
- Treating their money like your own
The Bottom Line
Contractors who understand the investor business model — tight timelines, predictable costs, market-appropriate finishes — become indispensable partners. Get your first investor client, do exceptional work, and the referrals will follow.
