How to Hire and Manage Virtual Assistants for Property Management in 2026
You're drowning in tenant emails, maintenance coordination, lease renewals, and owner reports. You know you need help, but hiring a full-time employee at $45K+ feels premature when you're managing 80 doors. Enter virtual assistants.
Property management VAs have exploded in popularity — and for good reason. A skilled VA costs $6-12/hour, works from the Philippines or Latin America, and can handle 60-70% of the administrative tasks eating your day. But here's the problem: most PMs hire a VA, dump a bunch of random tasks on them, and wonder why it doesn't work.
This guide covers exactly how to hire, train, and manage VAs for property management — including the tasks to delegate, where to find quality candidates, and the systems that make it work.
Why VAs Work for Property Management
Property management is uniquely suited for virtual assistants because the majority of the work is digital. Think about your day:
- Answering tenant emails and phone calls
- Coordinating maintenance requests with vendors
- Processing applications and running screening
- Preparing owner statements and reports
- Following up on rent payments
- Posting listings and responding to inquiries
- Scheduling showings and inspections
Every one of those tasks can be done by someone sitting 8,000 miles away with a laptop and your PM software login. The only things a VA can't do: physical showings, inspections, and lockouts. Everything else is fair game.
💡 The math: A full-time US-based admin costs $3,500-4,500/month. A full-time Filipino VA costs $1,200-1,800/month. At 150 doors, that's the difference between $24/door and $10/door for the same work.
What to Delegate to Your VA (And What Not To)
High-Value VA Tasks (Start Here)
- Maintenance coordination — Receive requests, create work orders, dispatch vendors, follow up on completion. This alone saves 10+ hours/week.
- Tenant communication — Answer routine questions, send reminders, handle tenant communication for non-escalated issues.
- Rent collection follow-up — Send late notices, make courtesy calls, track payment plans.
- Listing management — Post vacancies to Zillow, Apartments.com, Facebook. Respond to inquiries. Schedule showings.
- Application processing — Collect applications, initiate screening, verify employment and references.
- Owner reporting — Generate monthly reports, compile financial summaries, send owner updates.
Tasks to Keep In-House
- Owner relationship management — Owners want to talk to the decision-maker for serious issues. Don't hand off your key client relationships.
- Eviction decisions — Legal processes require local expertise and judgment calls.
- Pricing strategy — Rent pricing, fee negotiations, and pricing decisions need market knowledge.
- Physical property work — Inspections, showings, emergency responses.
Where to Find Quality PM Virtual Assistants
The Philippines (Most Popular)
The Philippines is the go-to market for PM VAs. English proficiency is high, the culture is service-oriented, and there's a massive talent pool. Expect to pay $5-10/hour for experienced candidates.
- OnlineJobs.ph — The largest Filipino VA job board. Post your job for $69/month. You'll get 50-100 applicants.
- Shepherd — Specializes in PM virtual assistants. Pre-vetted candidates who already know AppFolio, Buildium, and Rent Manager. Premium pricing ($10-14/hour) but saves weeks of training.
- VPM Solutions — Another PM-specific VA platform. Good middle ground between DIY and full-service.
Latin America (Growing Fast)
If time zone alignment matters to you (and it should for a PM business), Latin American VAs work during US business hours without the overnight shift that Filipino VAs deal with. Expect $8-15/hour.
- Near — Curated LatAm talent. Higher cost but excellent quality.
- Somewhere.com — Good for finding bilingual VAs (huge advantage if you manage properties in diverse markets).
The Hiring Process: Step by Step
Step 1: Write a Killer Job Post
Be specific. "Virtual assistant for property management company" gets you 200 generic applicants. Instead, list exact tasks, software requirements, and working hours. Include a screening question like "Describe your experience with property management software" to filter out mass-applicants.
Step 2: Screen with a Paid Test Task
Don't just interview — test. Give your top 5 candidates a paid test ($20-30) that mirrors real work:
- Draft a response to a tenant maintenance request
- Create a mock work order in your PM software (give them a trial login)
- Write a late rent follow-up email
This tells you more in 2 hours than 10 interviews would.
Step 3: Start with a 2-Week Trial
Hire your top candidate for a 2-week paid trial. Give them real tasks from day one. By day 10, you'll know if they're a fit. If not, move to your second choice. Don't drag out a bad hire hoping they'll improve.
Training Your VA: The System That Works
The #1 reason VA hires fail is bad training. You can't just hand someone a login and say "figure it out." Here's the framework:
Create Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)
Before your VA starts, document your top 10 recurring tasks as step-by-step SOPs. Use Loom to record screen videos — a 5-minute video is worth 5 pages of text. Cover:
- How to process a maintenance request from start to finish
- How to post a listing on each platform
- How to run a tenant screening
- How to generate an owner report
- How to handle a late rent call
💡 Pro tip: Have your VA create SOPs for new tasks they learn. This builds your knowledge base AND forces them to internalize the process.
The First 30 Days
- Week 1: Shadow mode. They watch you do tasks, ask questions, take notes. Daily 30-minute check-ins.
- Week 2: Assisted mode. They do tasks while you review every output. Correct mistakes immediately.
- Week 3: Independent mode. They work solo, you spot-check 20% of their output.
- Week 4: Full delegation. Weekly check-ins, monthly performance reviews.
Managing Your VA Day-to-Day
Communication Tools
- Slack or Microsoft Teams for daily communication (not email — too slow)
- Loom for async video walkthroughs
- Your PM software as the single source of truth for all property tasks
- Time Doctor or Hubstaff for time tracking (optional but recommended initially)
Set Clear Expectations
- Define working hours and response time expectations
- Create a priority matrix: emergencies vs. same-day vs. next-day tasks
- Establish an escalation protocol — when should they ping you vs. handle independently?
- Weekly 1-on-1 meetings (15-20 minutes) to review performance and address issues
Track Performance with KPIs
Don't manage by vibes. Track real numbers:
- Maintenance requests processed per day
- Average response time to tenant inquiries
- Listings posted per week
- Applications processed per week
- Error rate on owner reports
Review these KPIs monthly. If performance drops, address it immediately. If it stays strong, consider expanding their responsibilities.
The Cost Breakdown: Real Numbers
Here's what you'll actually spend:
- Filipino VA (full-time, 40hr/week): $1,200-1,800/month
- LatAm VA (full-time): $1,800-2,800/month
- PM-specialized VA service: $1,800-2,500/month
- Tools (Slack, Loom, time tracking): $50-100/month
- Training time investment: 20-30 hours in month one
💡 ROI calculation: If your VA handles maintenance coordination, tenant communication, and listing management, they're replacing 25-30 hours/week of your time. At 150 doors, that's time you should spend on business growth and owner acquisition — activities worth $100-200/hour to your business.
When to Hire Your First VA
The sweet spot is 50-80 doors. Below 50, you probably can't justify the cost. Above 80 without help, you're burning out and your service quality is dropping.
Signs you need a VA yesterday:
- You're responding to tenant emails at 11pm
- Maintenance requests sit unaddressed for 24+ hours
- You've stopped proactively marketing for new owners because you're buried in operations
- Owner reports are late or inconsistent
- You dread opening your inbox every morning
Scaling: From One VA to a Team
Once your first VA is trained and performing, the playbook for scaling is simple:
- 100 doors: First VA handles maintenance + tenant communication
- 200 doors: Add a second VA for leasing + application processing
- 300+ doors: Third VA for bookkeeping and owner reporting, or hire a VA team lead
At 300 doors with 3 VAs, you're spending roughly $4,500/month on admin — a fraction of what a US-based team would cost. That margin difference goes straight to your bottom line and funds your growth to 500 doors.
The property managers who scale fastest aren't the ones who work the hardest. They're the ones who build systems and leverage talented people — regardless of where those people sit. Virtual assistants are one of the biggest competitive advantages available to PM companies today. Stop trying to do everything yourself.
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