Property Management Business Plan Template [2026]
You don't need a 40-page business plan to start a property management company. You need a clear, actionable document that answers four questions: What are you building? Who are you serving? How will you make money? And how will you grow?
This template has been used by property managers who've scaled from 0 to 500+ doors. It's practical, not academic. Adapt it to your market, your resources, and your goals.
Table of Contents
1. Executive Summary
Your executive summary is a one-page overview of your entire plan. Write it last, even though it goes first. It should cover:
- Business concept: What you do and for whom
- Market opportunity: Why now, why your market
- Revenue model: How you make money
- Growth target: Where you'll be in 12 months
- Funding needs: How much capital you need to start
Example: "[Company Name] is a residential property management company serving individual landlords and small investors in [City/Metro]. We manage single-family homes and small multifamily properties (2-20 units), charging 8-10% of collected rent plus leasing and ancillary fees. Our target is 100 doors under management within 18 months, generating $12,000+/month in recurring revenue."
2. Company Overview
Legal Structure
Most property management companies start as an LLC. This gives you liability protection without the complexity of a corporation. You'll need:
- LLC formation in your state ($50-500 depending on state)
- EIN from the IRS (free)
- Property management license or real estate broker's license (varies by state — check your state's requirements before doing anything else)
- Business insurance: general liability ($500-1,000/year) and E&O insurance ($800-2,000/year)
- Trust account at a local bank for holding owner and tenant funds
For a detailed breakdown of all startup costs, check our guide on how much it costs to start a property management company.
Mission Statement
Keep it concrete: "We maximize returns for rental property owners by reducing vacancy, controlling maintenance costs, and placing quality tenants — so owners can enjoy passive income without the headaches." Skip the corporate jargon about "leveraging synergies." Nobody cares.
3. Market Analysis
Market Size
Research your target market. You need to know:
- Total rental units in your market: Check Census data and local housing reports
- Percentage professionally managed: Nationally, about 44% of rental properties are professionally managed. In your market, it may be higher or lower.
- Number of competing property managers: Search Google, Yelp, and NARPM directories
- Average management fees in your market: Call competitors and ask, or check their websites
Target Customer
Define your ideal customer profile (ICP). Be specific:
- Type: Individual landlords with 1-10 rental properties
- Property type: Single-family homes and small multifamily (2-4 units)
- Average rent: $1,000-2,500/month
- Pain points: Tired of midnight maintenance calls, dealing with problem tenants, or managing from out of state
- Where they hang out: Real estate investor meetups, BiggerPockets forums, Facebook real estate groups
Competitive Advantage
You need at least one reason owners should choose you over established competitors:
- Technology: Better online portals, faster response times, automated reporting
- Specialization: Focus on a specific property type or neighborhood
- Service level: More personal attention than large companies can provide
- Pricing: Better value (not necessarily cheapest — best value for the fee)
4. Services & Pricing
Your revenue comes from multiple streams. Here's a typical pricing structure:
| Service | Fee | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Management | 8-10% of collected rent | Core revenue stream |
| Tenant Placement / Leasing | 50-100% of first month's rent | One-time per lease |
| Setup / Onboarding | $200-500 per property | One-time per property |
| Lease Renewal | $150-300 | Annual per tenant |
| Maintenance Coordination | 10-15% markup on vendor invoices | Or flat fee per work order |
| Eviction Management | $300-500 | Plus legal costs |
Pro tip: Don't compete on price alone. The property managers who charge 6% and include everything are the ones who go out of business. Charge fairly, deliver exceptional service, and let results speak for themselves. See our profit margins guide for the math.
5. Marketing & Sales Strategy
This is where most business plans fall apart. "We'll use social media and networking" isn't a strategy. Here's what a real marketing plan looks like:
Year 1 Marketing Channels (in priority order)
- Direct outreach to FSBO landlords: 20 calls/day minimum. Cost: $0. Expected: 2-4 doors/month.
- Real estate agent partnerships: Build relationships with 15 agents. Offer $250-500 referral fees. Expected: 2-3 doors/month after ramp-up.
- Google Ads: $500-1,000/month budget targeting "[city] property management." Expected: 1-3 doors/month.
- SEO / Content marketing: Publish 4-8 blog posts per month targeting property management keywords in your market. Free but takes 3-6 months to produce results. Learn more in our property management SEO guide.
- Real estate investor meetups: Attend 2-4 per month. Bring business cards. Expected: 1-2 doors/month.
For 15 more detailed strategies, read our property management lead generation guide.
Sales Process
Map out your sales funnel:
- Lead capture: Owner fills out form, calls, or is referred
- Discovery call: 15-minute phone call to understand their needs
- Property evaluation: Visit the property, assess condition, estimate rent
- Proposal: Send management agreement with your recommended fee structure
- Close: Sign agreement, collect setup fee, begin onboarding
Target conversion rate: 25-35% from discovery call to signed agreement.
6. Operations Plan
Technology Stack
- PM Software: AppFolio ($280/month minimum), Buildium ($52-175/month), or Rent Manager (custom pricing)
- CRM: HubSpot (free tier), Follow Up Boss, or LeadSimple ($65/month)
- Communication: Google Workspace ($7/user/month), RingCentral or OpenPhone for business line
- Maintenance: Property Meld ($2/unit/month) or your PM software's built-in system
Staffing Plan
| Door Count | Staff Needed | Monthly Payroll |
|---|---|---|
| 0-30 | Just you | $0 (you're the CEO and janitor) |
| 30-60 | + 1 admin/coordinator | $2,600-3,500 |
| 60-100 | + 1 property manager | $5,200-7,500 |
| 100-150 | + 1 maintenance coordinator | $7,800-10,500 |
Learn more about building your team: How to Hire Your First Property Manager Employee.
7. Financial Projections
Startup Costs
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| LLC Formation + Licensing | $500-2,000 |
| Real Estate License (if required) | $1,000-3,000 |
| Insurance (first year) | $1,500-3,000 |
| PM Software (first 3 months) | $500-1,500 |
| Website | $500-2,000 |
| Marketing (first 3 months) | $1,500-3,000 |
| Office/Co-working (optional) | $0-1,500 |
| Total | $5,500-16,000 |
Month-by-Month Revenue Projection (Year 1)
| Month | Doors | Mgmt Fees | Leasing Fees | Total Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month 1-3 | 5-10 | $500-1,000 | $500-1,000 | $1,000-2,000 |
| Month 4-6 | 15-25 | $1,500-2,500 | $750-1,500 | $2,250-4,000 |
| Month 7-9 | 30-45 | $3,000-4,500 | $1,000-2,000 | $4,000-6,500 |
| Month 10-12 | 50-70 | $5,000-7,000 | $1,500-3,000 | $6,500-10,000 |
Reality check: Most property management companies don't break even until month 6-9. Make sure you have enough savings or a side income to cover 6-12 months of living expenses while you build the business.
8. Growth Milestones
Set clear milestones so you know if you're on track:
- Month 1: LLC formed, license obtained, PM software set up, first 2 clients signed
- Month 3: 10 doors under management, website live, Google Ads running
- Month 6: 25-30 doors, first employee hired, 3+ Google reviews
- Month 9: 40-50 doors, SEO traffic starting, referral system in place
- Month 12: 60-75 doors, profitable after expenses, multiple lead channels working
- Month 18: 100 doors, 2+ employees, $10,000+/month recurring revenue
9. Risk Analysis
Every business plan should honestly address risks:
- Regulatory risk: Property management licensing requirements vary by state and can change. Stay current with your state's regulations.
- Market risk: Economic downturns can reduce rental demand. Mitigate by diversifying property types and price points.
- Operational risk: A major maintenance failure or tenant lawsuit could be expensive. Insurance and proper procedures are your protection.
- Competition risk: Established companies have brand recognition. Counter with better service, technology, and responsiveness.
- Cash flow risk: Revenue ramps slowly while expenses start immediately. Have 6-12 months of reserves.
10. Putting It All Together
Your finished business plan should be 8-12 pages. Here's the structure:
- Executive Summary (1 page)
- Company Overview (1 page)
- Market Analysis (1-2 pages)
- Services & Pricing (1 page)
- Marketing & Sales Strategy (1-2 pages)
- Operations Plan (1 page)
- Financial Projections (1-2 pages)
- Growth Milestones (half page)
- Risk Analysis (half page)
Important: This document isn't meant to sit in a drawer. Review it monthly. Update your financial projections with actuals. Adjust your marketing strategy based on what's working. A business plan is a living document — treat it like one.
For the next step, read our guide on how to grow your property management business once you've launched.
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