8% preferred returns: how they work (and what they are not)
In many private real estate offerings, investors encounter an annual preferred return target—e.g., 8%—on contributed capital. This is not the same as a bond coupon. It is a priority in the waterfall: who gets paid first from available cash flow, subject to the operating agreement and legal constraints.
Priority, not guarantee
If net operating income and financing allow, distributions follow the waterfall. If cash is unavailable (vacancy, capex, reserves, or lender covenants), the preferred return may accrue or go unpaid depending on how the deal is written. Always read the PPM for the exact definition.
Above the preferred: splits
After the preferred return is satisfied (per the documents), remaining cash flow is often split between investors and the sponsor—commonly expressed as a percentage (for example, 70% to investors / 30% to sponsor) on incremental cash flow. Again: the only binding terms are in the documents for that offering.
Why sponsors disclose preferred returns
A stated preferred return clarifies economic ordering and helps investors compare structures across sponsors. It should be paired with fee transparency and risk disclosure—not sales claims.