Financials

Property Management Profit Margins: What to Expect

March 6, 2026 · 14 min read · By PropertyCEO

Every property manager wants to know: how much money should I actually be making? The answer depends on your door count, pricing structure, market, and efficiency. But there are benchmarks you should be hitting — and if you're not, there's money being left on the table.

This guide breaks down the real economics of running a property management company at different scales. We're using actual numbers, not theoretical projections.

Table of Contents

  1. Revenue Streams Breakdown
  2. Revenue Per Door Benchmarks
  3. Operating Costs by Company Size
  4. Profit Margins by Company Size
  5. 7 Ways to Improve Your Margins
  6. Margin Killers to Watch For
  7. Industry Benchmarks

Revenue Streams Breakdown

Property management revenue isn't just management fees. A well-structured company has 4-6 revenue streams:

Revenue StreamTypical Amount% of Total Revenue
Monthly Management Fees8-10% of rent collected50-60%
Leasing / Tenant Placement Fees50-100% of first month's rent15-25%
Lease Renewal Fees$150-300 per renewal5-8%
Maintenance Markup10-20% on vendor invoices8-15%
Setup / Onboarding Fees$200-500 per property3-5%
Late Fee Revenue$25-75 per instance (split or kept)2-5%

Key insight: The companies with the best profit margins aren't necessarily charging the highest management fees — they're maximizing ancillary revenue. A 10% management fee with no other fees produces less revenue per door than an 8% fee with leasing, renewal, and maintenance markup fees.

Revenue Per Door Benchmarks

This is the most important metric in property management finance. Your total annual revenue per door determines your profitability more than almost any other factor.

Performance LevelAnnual Revenue Per DoorMonthly Equivalent
Below Average$900-1,200$75-100
Average$1,200-1,800$100-150
Above Average$1,800-2,400$150-200
Top Performers$2,400-3,600$200-300

These numbers assume an average rent of $1,200-1,800/month. Higher-rent markets will naturally produce higher revenue per door.

If you're below $1,200/year per door, your pricing needs work. You're likely undercharging on management fees, not charging leasing fees, or missing ancillary revenue opportunities. Read our pricing strategy guide to fix this.

Operating Costs by Company Size

Solo Operator (0-30 Doors)

Expense CategoryMonthly Cost% of Revenue
PM Software$52-1755-15%
Insurance (amortized)$100-2505-10%
Phone / Internet / Tools$75-1503-8%
Marketing$200-50010-20%
Vehicle / Gas$150-3005-10%
Accounting / Legal$50-2002-5%
Total Operating (excl. your salary)$627-1,57530-60%

At 30 doors with $100/door/month revenue, you're making about $3,000/month gross. After $1,000 in operating costs, your take-home is roughly $2,000/month. Not great — but this is the bootstrapping phase. Check our startup cost guide for more detail.

Small Company (30-100 Doors)

Expense CategoryMonthly Cost% of Revenue
Payroll (1-2 employees)$3,000-7,00025-40%
PM Software$175-4003-5%
Office / Co-working$300-1,0003-7%
Insurance$200-4002-4%
Marketing$500-1,5005-10%
Phone / Tools / Tech$150-4002-3%
Vehicle / Travel$200-5002-4%
Accounting / Legal$200-5002-3%
Total Operating$4,725-11,70040-65%

Mid-Size Company (100-300 Doors)

Expense CategoryMonthly Cost% of Revenue
Payroll (3-6 employees)$10,000-25,00030-45%
PM Software$400-1,2002-3%
Office Space$1,000-3,0003-5%
Insurance$400-8001-3%
Marketing$1,500-4,0005-8%
Technology / Tools$400-1,0001-3%
Vehicles$500-1,5002-3%
Professional Services$500-1,5002-3%
Total Operating$14,700-38,00045-60%

Profit Margins by Company Size

Here's what healthy profit margins look like at different scales:

Company SizeGross RevenueNet Margin (Before Owner Pay)Owner Take-Home
30 doors$3,000-4,500/mo40-55%$1,200-2,475/mo
50 doors$6,000-8,000/mo35-50%$2,100-4,000/mo
100 doors$12,000-18,000/mo25-40%$3,000-7,200/mo
200 doors$28,000-40,000/mo25-35%$7,000-14,000/mo
500 doors$75,000-120,000/mo20-30%$15,000-36,000/mo

Notice the "profit margin squeeze" between 50-150 doors. This is the hardest phase because you're adding employees (expensive) before you have enough scale for efficiency. Many companies see their margins DIP during this phase before recovering at 200+ doors. This is normal — don't panic.

To navigate this squeeze successfully, you need the right growth strategy. Our guide on scaling from 100 to 500 doors covers exactly how to do this.

7 Ways to Improve Your Margins

1. Raise Your Management Fee

If you're charging 8% and your competition charges 10%, you're leaving 25% of potential management fee revenue on the table. Most owners don't choose based on fee alone — they choose based on value. If you're delivering great service, raise your rates.

2. Charge Proper Leasing Fees

Tenant placement is expensive — marketing the unit, showing it, screening applicants, preparing leases. If you're doing this for free (or for 50% of first month's rent), you're subsidizing a service that should be profitable. Industry standard is 75-100% of first month's rent.

3. Add Maintenance Markup

You're coordinating vendors, checking work quality, and handling emergency calls. A 10-15% markup on maintenance invoices is standard and justified. On a portfolio generating $100,000/year in maintenance spend, that's $10,000-15,000 in additional annual revenue.

4. Implement Lease Renewal Fees

Renewing a lease takes work: market analysis, rent adjustment recommendation, lease preparation, signing coordination. Charge $150-300 per renewal. On 100 doors with 70% renewal rate, that's $10,500-21,000/year in extra revenue.

5. Reduce Owner Churn

Every owner who leaves costs you the acquisition expense of finding a replacement. Reducing annual churn from 15% to 8% on a 100-door portfolio saves you 7 replacement acquisitions per year — roughly $3,500-7,000 in marketing costs plus the lost revenue during the gap.

6. Automate Operations

Every hour spent on manual tasks is an hour not spent on growth. Invest in automation for: online rent collection, maintenance request intake, owner reporting, tenant screening, and lease generation. Automation can save 15-20 hours per week at 100 doors.

7. Negotiate Vendor Rates

At 50+ doors, you're sending significant work to your vendors. Use that volume to negotiate better rates. A 10% reduction in maintenance costs goes straight to your bottom line (and can be passed through to owners as a value proposition).

Margin Killers to Watch For

Industry Benchmarks

How does your company compare? Here are the targets to aim for:

MetricPoorAverageGoodExcellent
Revenue/Door/Year<$1,000$1,200-1,600$1,600-2,200$2,200+
Net Profit Margin<15%15-25%25-35%35%+
Owner Churn Rate>20%12-18%8-12%<8%
Doors/Employee<3540-5555-7070+
Cost Per Acquisition>$2,000$1,000-2,000$500-1,000<$500
Avg Days Vacant>3020-3014-20<14

Track these KPIs monthly. If you're in the "Poor" column for any metric, that's your biggest opportunity for improvement. Focus there before chasing new growth.

Building a profitable property management company is about unit economics, not just door count. A 50-door company with excellent margins outearns a 100-door company with sloppy operations every time. Get the economics right, then scale.

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