Multifamily Distress in Older Assets: Why Today’s Market Is Creating a Unique Buying Opportunity

Overview
Much of the current conversation around multifamily distress has focused on newer developments—rising interest rates, oversupply, and lease-up challenges.
But a more compelling opportunity is emerging elsewhere.
Across the country, older multifamily assets—particularly workforce housing built in the 1970s through early 2000s—are experiencing a different kind of distress. One driven less by macro headlines, and more by years of underinvestment, insufficient capital improvements, and a lack of experienced ownership.
For investors, this segment offers something distinct:
the ability to acquire functionally sound assets at a discounted basis, with clear and executable paths to improvement.
The Overlooked Segment of the Market
Older multifamily properties make up a significant portion of the U.S. housing stock.
These assets are typically:
- 20–50+ years old
- Located in suburban or secondary markets
- Positioned as workforce or attainable housing
For decades, many of these properties have been owned by:
- Long-term holders who acquired assets at a much lower basis
- Local ownership groups with limited institutional infrastructure
- In some cases, inexperienced operators who entered the market without the ability to scale operations
Because these owners often relied on:
- Stable occupancy
- Minimal reinvestment
- Simpler operating approaches
Many properties did not receive the level of capital improvements or professional management required to remain competitive.
As a result, a large portion of this housing stock today is not fundamentally flawed—but it is underinvested and under-optimized relative to its potential.

Where Distress Is Actually Showing Up
Distress in older multifamily assets is often more visible—and more actionable—than in newer properties.
Unlike recently built assets where issues may stem from capital markets or lease-up timing, older properties require ongoing, high-quality capital investment and experienced ownership to remain competitive.
Many of these assets have reached a point where they need:
- Significant interior renovations
- Major system upgrades (roofs, HVAC, plumbing, electrical)
- Reinvestment into common areas and overall property condition
- More sophisticated property management and operational oversight
However, in many cases, that level of reinvestment has not occurred.
These properties have often been owned by:
- Long-term holders who deferred capital expenditures over time
- Operators who relied on legacy performance rather than reinvestment
- Less experienced ownership groups without the capital or expertise to execute a full repositioning
As a result, the distress becomes tangible and easy to identify:
- Physical deterioration that impacts leasing velocity
- Units that fall meaningfully below market standards
- Rising maintenance costs without corresponding rent growth
- Occupancy that remains stable, but at suppressed rent levels
This is not hidden distress—it is visible at the asset level.
And that visibility is what creates opportunity.
Because in many cases, the issue is not location or demand—it is the lack of:
- Adequate capital deployment
- Experienced ownership
- A defined execution strategy
For investors with the ability to bring both capital and operational expertise, these assets represent a clear path to value creation.

Basis Advantage: Buying Below Replacement Cost
One of the most compelling aspects of acquiring older assets in today’s environment is pricing.
Because these properties:
- Require meaningful capital improvements
- Lack modern amenities
- Have been under-managed
They can often be acquired at a significant discount to replacement cost.
This creates a critical advantage:
- Investors are not competing with new construction economics
- Downside is protected by lower basis
- Upside is created through execution
In many cases, even after renovation costs, total investment remains well below the cost of building new.
Value Creation Through Execution
Older assets offer one of the clearest and most controllable paths to value creation.
Unlike strategies that depend on market timing, these investments are driven by tangible improvements:
- Renovating unit interiors to meet market standards
- Addressing deferred maintenance and major systems
- Enhancing curb appeal and common areas
- Implementing professional property management
These improvements translate directly into:
- Rent increases within workforce affordability ranges
- Improved occupancy and retention
- Expansion of net operating income
The key distinction is that value is created through execution—not assumed through market growth.
Demand That Already Exists
Older multifamily assets typically serve workforce housing demand—one of the most stable segments of the market.
This demand is:
- Driven by necessity rather than lifestyle
- Supported by local employment bases
- Underserved in many smaller and secondary markets
In many cases, there is limited new supply targeting this segment, reinforcing demand for renovated older properties.
For investors, this results in:
- Reduced lease-up risk
- Stable occupancy
- Realistic and sustainable rent growth
Less Competition, Better Positioning
Institutional capital has historically concentrated in newer assets and primary markets, leaving older workforce housing less competitive.
This creates advantages for investors willing to operate in this space:
- Fewer bidders on acquisitions
- More attractive pricing
- Greater ability to negotiate terms
In today’s environment, where uncertainty has sidelined many buyers, this segment offers a more execution-driven opportunity set with less competition.
A Different Kind of Risk Profile
Older assets do carry risk—but it is a different type of risk.
Instead of relying on:
- Market timing
- Aggressive rent growth
- Capital markets recovery
performance is driven by:
- Construction execution
- Operational discipline
- Asset-level decision making
For experienced operators, these risks are:
- understandable
- controllable
- directly tied to execution
Sources:
- Federal Reserve
- U.S. Census Bureau
- CBRE
- JLL
- National Multifamily Housing Council








