There's a path that takes you from "I own a house I rent out" to "I own buildings that rent out." It's not a secret, but it does require a different mindset at each stage.

Stage 1 — The single-family rental

Your first investment property. Usually purchased with 20-25% down on a conventional investment loan (sometimes less if you're house-hacking). Why people start here:

The downside: at the single-family level, every vacancy is a 100% income loss for that month. There's no spreading the risk.

Stage 2 — The duplex / triplex / fourplex (small multifamily)

Anything 2-4 units still qualifies for residential financing (the same loan products as a single-family home). This is the sweet spot for most growing investors:

Houston Note

Small multifamily inventory in Houston is limited compared to coastal cities, but it exists — particularly in older neighborhoods like Heights, Eastwood, and parts of the East End. Be willing to look at properties that need work.

Stage 3 — Medium multifamily (5+ units)

This is where you cross into commercial financing. The rules change:

Most investors who get to this stage have been doing real estate for 3-5+ years and have either capital or a partnership structure to make it work.

Stage 4 — Larger buildings, syndication, or commercial

This is a different world. Most investors at this level are doing deals as part of a team — either as a sponsor of a syndication (where you raise capital from investors) or as a limited partner in someone else's deal.

This is a great goal, but it's a long-term one. Start at Stage 1 or 2 and earn your way up.

The strategic questions at every stage

How are you financing?

Conventional loans, FHA (for owner-occupied), DSCR loans (debt service coverage ratio — based on property income), portfolio loans from local banks, hard money for flips. Each has trade-offs.

How are you managing?

How are you screening tenants?

This is the single most important operational decision you'll make. Bad tenants cost you everything good tenants saved you. My screening standard:

The Houston-specific play

Houston is one of the few major markets where small multifamily still makes financial sense AND has appreciation potential AND has growing rental demand. The strategies I see working right now:

  1. Buy a duplex/triplex in a transitional neighborhood, live in one unit, rent the others to cover mortgage
  2. Buy a 4-unit in an established rental neighborhood, get a property manager, treat it like a small business
  3. Buy single-family in growth corridors (Cypress, Pearland, parts of Spring) for long-term appreciation + reasonable rent
  4. BRRR in older Houston neighborhoods with good bones — refinance out of your capital and repeat
The biggest mistake I see new investors make is buying based on the gross rent and the purchase price, ignoring everything in between. Operating costs, vacancy, capex, management — those are not optional, and they will eat your returns alive if you don't model them honestly.

What I bring to investor clients

I'm not a passive agent. I run real numbers, I know which neighborhoods cash flow and which don't, and I have a data analytics background that means I can pull rental comparables, build pro formas, and tell you whether a deal pencils — not just whether a house is nice.

If you're at the start of this journey or scaling up, send me a note. The first conversation is free, and even if we don't end up working together, you'll leave it with clarity.