Tupelo Data Room

property management business for Sale in Arizona

Similar businesses sell at 1.8x to 3.6x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for property management business businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$419k
Median cash flow$104k
Median sale price$235k
Multiple range1.8x - 2.5x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$882k
Median cash flow$249k
Median sale price$650k
Multiple range2.5x - 3.6x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about property management business acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating property management business acquisitions.

Doors under management are the unit that matters

Value tracks the number of doors managed and the recurring fee each one generates. Count the doors, confirm the management fee percentage, and read the contracts for term and cancellation language. A business managing 400 stable single-family doors on solid agreements is worth more than one with the same revenue concentrated in a few buildings that could leave at once.

Management contracts are cancellable, usually on short notice

Most management agreements let the owner terminate with about thirty days' notice, so the recurring revenue is stickier in practice than on paper but never guaranteed. The real risk is concentration: if a handful of owners control most of the doors, losing one relationship reshapes the business. Get a door-by-door and owner-by-owner breakdown and check how long the largest relationships have been in place.

Trust accounting is the compliance landmine

You will hold other people's money: security deposits, rent collected for owners, and reserve funds, all of which sit in regulated trust or escrow accounts. Commingling or shortfalls in these accounts are a serious regulatory problem that becomes yours at closing. Insist on a reconciliation of every trust account and, ideally, an independent review before you assume responsibility for the funds.

Most states require a real estate broker's license

In the majority of states, managing property for others and collecting rent requires an active real estate broker's license. If the seller is the licensed broker of record and is leaving, you need your own qualifying license or a licensed broker on staff, or you cannot legally operate. Confirm your state's exact requirement and your licensing path before you commit.

Door quality drives margin more than door count

Scattered single-family homes, HOA communities, and multifamily buildings have very different economics. Single-family management is maintenance-coordination heavy and labor-intensive per dollar; HOA and multifamily concentrate more doors under one relationship but carry their own complexity. Understand the mix, because two companies with identical door counts can have very different workloads and profitability.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

In most states, yes. Managing property and collecting rent for third parties typically requires an active real estate broker's license, and the seller is often the broker of record. If they are leaving, you either need to hold the qualifying license yourself or employ a licensed broker, or you cannot operate legally. Confirm your specific state's rule before closing, because this is a requirement you cannot work around after the fact.