United States

More young people are investing in residential rentals

Read time:
23
minutes
Upward-trending line graphs overlayed on top of a young woman on a laptop

More and more Millennials and Gen Zers are becoming residential real estate investors.

According to Bank of America, 80% of those between the ages of 21 and 42 are turning to real estate, private equity and other alternative investments over traditional stocks and bonds. Already 31% of Gen Z's retirement portfolios include real estate.

The reason is simple: 75% think that traditional investments won’t deliver the above-average returns that they are looking for.

At the same time, both generations place a premium on having the freedom and flexibility to pursue hobbies or side projects. They are also likely to be working full time and potentially living a long way from their investment properties. As a result, many young real estate investors, like this 29-year-old wedding guitarist and this 32-year-old vandweller, decide to outsource the day-to-day operations to a property management company.

With Millennials and Gen Z now a force to be reckoned with on both sides of the rental transaction, it pays to pay attention to their needs and wants. Both young renters and real estate investors are more likely to work with property managers that embrace technology as much as they do. Property managers who adapt their marketing strategies to appeal to these emerging generations of homebuyers could stand to gain even more.

More investor headlines

Most popular metros for Millennial homebuyers – LendingTree

Americans believe it's the worst time ever to buy a house – Axios

Although growing, institutional ownership of single-family rentals is not as big as you'd think – Benzinga

No items found.

See PayProp in action

Let us show you how to get more out of work and more out of life!

  • Real-time property management
  • Real-time bank integration
  • Real-time reconciliation & payments