Real estate syndication pools capital from multiple investors to purchase larger properties than any individual could buy alone. Through a syndicate, you can participate in apartment buildings, commercial real estate, or development projects — typically with minimum investments of $25,000–$100,000 — while a professional operator manages the deal.
A syndicator (also called a sponsor or general partner) identifies an investment opportunity, structures the deal, and raises capital from passive investors (limited partners). The syndicator handles acquisition, financing, management, and eventual sale. Investors contribute capital and receive a proportionate share of income and appreciation.
Work only with syndicators who comply with applicable securities laws. Legitimate operators will provide offering memorandums and confirm your investor qualification status.
Pooled ownership of multi-residential buildings — often 20–200 units. Provides stable, predictable cash flow distributions. Common in Calgary, Edmonton, Hamilton, and other markets with strong rental fundamentals.
Office, retail, industrial. Typically higher risk/return profile; longer lease terms can provide income predictability but exposure to sector-specific trends.
Pool capital for land or development projects. Higher risk (development risk, timing risk, market risk) but potentially higher returns. Not suitable for conservative investors.
Technically not syndications, but related. MICs pool investor capital to provide mortgages. Investors receive monthly income. MICs are regulated and many are publicly traded or available through registered dealers.
Typical structures include a preferred return to LPs (often 6–8% annualized) before the GP participates in upside, then a profit split (e.g., 70/30 LP/GP above the preferred return). Total returns vary widely — 8–15%+ IRR are common projections, though actual results depend on market performance.
Syndication investments are typically illiquid for 3–7 years. You cannot sell your interest the way you'd sell a stock. Some syndicators offer secondary market options or buy-back provisions, but these are not guaranteed. Only invest capital you can afford to have locked up for the full hold period.
Returns from syndications flow through to investors based on the structure. Income distributions are typically taxable as ordinary income. Capital gains on property sale flow through proportionately. The syndicator should provide T3 slips (or similar) detailing income components. Get tax advice on how syndication income fits into your overall tax picture, especially regarding the proposed 2/3 capital gains inclusion rate for gains over $250,000.
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