Property Management Vendor Management: Building a Reliable Vendor Network
Your vendor network can make or break your property management business. A reliable plumber who shows up in 2 hours makes you a hero. An unreliable one who no-shows makes you look incompetent. And the gap between those two outcomes often comes down to how you find, vet, manage, and retain your vendors.
Most PMs build their vendor list through desperation — frantically searching Yelp at 10pm when a pipe bursts. That's not a system. Here's how to build a vendor network that scales with your business and delivers consistently great results.
The Vendor Categories Every PM Needs
Before you build your network, map out what you need. Every PM company should have vetted vendors in these categories:
Tier 1: Must-Have (Day One)
- General handyman — Your most-used vendor. Handles 60% of maintenance requests.
- Plumber — Emergency capability required. Have 2-3 options.
- Electrician — Licensed and insured. Non-negotiable.
- HVAC technician — Seasonal demand spikes. Lock in relationships before summer.
- Locksmith — Lockouts happen at 2am. You need 24/7 availability.
Tier 2: Essential (First 50 Doors)
- Appliance repair
- Pest control
- Cleaning/turnover crew
- Painter
- Carpet cleaner
- Landscaper
Tier 3: Growth Phase (100+ Doors)
- Roofing contractor
- Foundation specialist
- Pool maintenance
- Tree service
- General contractor (renovations)
- Garage door repair
💡 The rule of two: For every critical vendor category (plumbing, electrical, HVAC), have at least two vetted options. Your primary vendor will be unavailable sometimes. A backup prevents emergency scrambling.
Finding Quality Vendors
The Best Sources (Ranked)
- Referrals from other property managers. Join your local NARPM chapter and ask. PMs who aren't your direct competitors will share vendor contacts freely. This is the #1 source of quality vendors.
- Real estate investor meetups. Investors who self-manage have great vendor contacts and are happy to share.
- Your existing vendors. Good plumbers know good electricians. Ask your best vendors who they recommend in other trades.
- Supply houses. Plumbing supply stores, electrical supply houses, and HVAC parts suppliers know which contractors are professionals and which are hacks.
- Online platforms. Thumbtack, Angi, and HomeAdvisor as a last resort — but always vet independently.
Vetting Checklist
Before adding any vendor to your approved list:
- ☐ Valid state/local contractor's license (verify online)
- ☐ General liability insurance ($1M minimum, your company named as additional insured)
- ☐ Workers' compensation insurance (if they have employees)
- ☐ At least 3 references from property managers or landlords
- ☐ W-9 on file for 1099 reporting
- ☐ Written agreement on rates, response times, and payment terms
- ☐ Trial job completed successfully before adding to primary rotation
Negotiating Vendor Rates
Volume is your leverage. Here's how to use it:
What to Negotiate
- Hourly rate vs. flat rate. For common jobs (faucet replacement, drain clearing), negotiate flat rates. You'll pay less and eliminate surprise invoices.
- Service call fees. Many vendors charge $75-150 just to show up. Negotiate this down or waive it for guaranteed monthly volume.
- Priority response time. In exchange for guaranteed volume, demand priority scheduling. Your work orders should jump the queue.
- Payment terms. Net-15 or Net-30 instead of payment on completion. This helps your cash flow and gives you leverage if work is subpar.
- Markup disclosure. Understand your vendor's markup on parts. Some charge 50-100% markup on materials. Negotiate a cap.
💡 The volume promise: "We manage 200 doors and do 50+ maintenance work orders per month. If you give us preferred pricing, you'll be our primary vendor for [trade]. That's consistent, year-round work with one point of contact." This pitch works because vendors hate marketing and love steady work.
Maintenance Markup: Your Revenue Opportunity
Most PM companies charge a 10-15% markup on maintenance work. This is standard, expected by owners, and an important revenue stream. At 200 doors spending $2,000/door/year on maintenance, a 10% markup generates $40,000 in annual revenue. This directly impacts your profit margins.
Vendor Management Systems
Use Your PM Software
AppFolio, Buildium, and Rent Manager all have vendor management modules. Use them:
- Maintain complete vendor profiles (contact info, insurance dates, license numbers)
- Track all work orders by vendor
- Monitor average completion times
- Set insurance expiration alerts (get updated certificates annually)
- Run vendor spend reports monthly
The Vendor Scorecard
Rate every vendor quarterly on these criteria:
- Response time: How quickly do they acknowledge and schedule? (Target: same-day for standard, 2 hours for emergency)
- Quality of work: Callback rate? (Target: under 5%)
- Pricing: Are they competitive? Are invoices accurate?
- Communication: Do they update you on progress? Send photos of completed work?
- Professionalism: Are they respectful to tenants? Do they clean up after themselves?
Score each category 1-5. Vendors averaging below 3 get a warning. Below 2.5? Replace them.
Building Long-Term Vendor Relationships
Your best vendors are business partners, not just contractors. Treat them that way:
- Pay on time, every time. This is the #1 thing vendors care about. Net-15 means Net-15, not Net-45-when-you-get-around-to-it.
- Give consistent volume. Don't spread work across 5 plumbers. Give 80% to your primary and 20% to your backup. Your primary will prioritize you.
- Communicate clearly. Detailed work orders with photos save your vendor time and reduce errors. Include tenant contact info, access instructions, and scope of work.
- Provide feedback. "Great job on the unit turnover at 123 Main St" takes 10 seconds and strengthens the relationship.
- Annual appreciation. A holiday gift card, a lunch, a referral to another PM — small gestures go a long way with tradespeople who are used to being treated poorly.
Emergency Vendor Protocols
When a pipe bursts at 2am, you can't be scrambling. Build your emergency maintenance vendor list separately:
- 24/7 plumber — Confirm they actually answer after hours (test it)
- 24/7 locksmith
- Emergency board-up service (for break-ins or storm damage)
- Water mitigation company (for floods and leaks)
- HVAC emergency service (critical in extreme heat/cold markets)
Program these numbers into every team member's phone. When an emergency call comes in, your team shouldn't have to look anything up.
Scaling Your Vendor Network
As you grow past 200 doors, your vendor management needs evolve:
- Dedicated maintenance coordinator. At 150+ doors, one person should own all vendor relationships and work order management. This is typically your first hire.
- Preferred vendor agreements. Formalize your arrangements with written contracts covering rates, response times, insurance requirements, and termination clauses.
- Vendor portal. Some PM software offers vendor portals where contractors can accept work orders, upload photos, and submit invoices digitally.
- Quarterly vendor reviews. Meet with your top vendors quarterly. Discuss performance, upcoming projects, and how to improve the partnership.
Your vendor network is infrastructure. Like any infrastructure, it requires deliberate investment upfront but pays dividends for years. The PM companies with the best maintenance systems aren't the ones with the biggest budgets — they're the ones with the best vendor relationships.
Build Systems That Scale
The PropertyCEO Growth Playbook includes vendor agreement templates, scorecard frameworks, and the maintenance management systems that top PM companies use.
Get the complete playbook with 50+ templates → $197 (30-day guarantee) →