Real Estate Developer Fee

Hey Guys,

Where do you see real estate developer fees at these days? I've been underwriting deals based on 4% of Hard Cost+Soft Cost.

Should there be an acquisition fee on top of this for the developer for "putting the deal together"?

Typical Development Fee

So what does the typical development look like? This user outlines how he asses fees on ongoing deals.
from certified user @DB73

From a lender's standpoint, I typically want to see Developer's Fees around 3% of total project costs (land, hard and soft), no more than 3.5%. Sometimes I see an acquisition fee, but not always. My scrutiny on fees increases when the developer is also acting as their own general contractor.

I want to see the proper alignment of interests between the developer, their equity partner and me (as lender) - that can get somewhat skewed when the developer is also the GC and is earning a development fee, GC fee, acquisition fee (and maybe even a construction management fee).

I have to ask myself, at the margin, does this developer care about the ultimate success of the project or is it just about the fees. Another good control to have in the deal is structuring when exactly the developer earns the fee. I want to see as much of the fee back loaded as possible (keeping the developer as focused on the final success of the deal), but the developer of course wants as much front loaded as possible.

In general I try to target 25% of the fee (or less) recognized at loan closing, 50% paid pro rata with hard cost draws, and 25% at certificate of occupancy (I try to push to stabilization if I can instead of C of O).


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Comments (25)

9y 
Gentleman and Scholar, what's your opinion? Comment below:

4% of Hard Costs & Managed Soft. Sometimes they (the Limited Partner) will hold 20-25% of the developer fee until development completion to incentivize the developer.

Most definitely there should be an acquisition fee, especially if the project was an off market transaction. Industry standard seems to be about 1% of the purchase price.

9y 
H. Roark, what's your opinion? Comment below:

Good question. For developer fees, I'd say current market rate is ~5% of hard costs. I've seen portions disbursed at construction start, construction completion, and stabilization.

Regarding acquisition fees, it all depends on how much (perceived) LP competition there is for the deal. Agree that off-market status is a key driver in determining whether a capital partner will be willing to pay.

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Best Response
9y 
DB73, what's your opinion? Comment below:

From a lender's standpoint, I typically want to see Developer's Fees around 3% of total project costs (land, hard and soft), no more than 3.5%. Sometimes I see an acquisition fee, but not always. My scrutiny on fees increases when the developer is also acting as their own general contractor. I want to see the proper alignment of interests between the developer, their equity partner and me (as lender) - that can get somewhat skewed when the developer is also the GC and is earning a development fee, GC fee, acquisition fee (and maybe even a construction management fee). I have to ask myself, at the margin, does this developer care about the ultimate success of the project or is it just about the fees. Another good control to have in the deal is structuring when exactly the developer earns the fee. I want to see as much of the fee back loaded as possible (keeping the developer as focused on the final success of the deal), but the developer of course wants as much front loaded as possible. In general I try to target 25% of the fee (or less) recognized at loan closing, 50% paid pro rata with hard cost draws, and 25% at certificate of occupancy (I try to push to stabilization if I can instead of C of O).

Way more than you asked, but hopefully that was helpful.

9y 
GregMadeMeDoIt, what's your opinion? Comment below:

Right on, right on.

I'd go even a step further--I've been with my particular bank for 6 months now. I've yet to see a developer fee financed by our debt; therefore, I've yet to see a developer fee on a budget from a developer that works with us. Since banks got burned so badly on development projects a few years ago, it would be a huge red flag for us to see a developer try to pocket a fee while getting 75-80% LTC or LTV with IO interest around 5% or less. Our bank (and our competitors) have gotten out of the business of taking on all the downside risk with limited upside.

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9y 
Anonymous Monkey, what's your opinion? Comment below:

Typically, the dev fee is 3-9% range + 50% of equity assuming you have the property (if in escrow) tied up and have paid for architectural and engineering and approval permits etc... Depends on deal but typically deals my father and I do the above is very true, especially in the $50MM range.

9y 
Risk Adjusted Return, what's your opinion? Comment below:

On our Multifamily deals (typically in the $35-75MM range) we take a 3-4% developer fee based on total development cost of the project. We draw down on the fee as based on percentage completed. Typically we keep this fee 100% in house, however depending on debt guarantee and other deal points there could be splits or performance hold backs on the fee. Keep in mind that our equity is raised with friends and family and that more institutional type investors typically will propose a split of the fee.

Thanks.

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9y 
TinMan1, what's your opinion? Comment below:

Thanks for the response, this is what I was looking for.

"Never let success get to your head and never let failure get to your heart"
9y 
prospie, what's your opinion? Comment below:
thexaspect:

^ found the developer....

so true. OP: " I would imagine most LPs would not be too pleased with a developer receiving revenue before the Pref. has been reached or am I mistaken on this?" Sometimes the development fee is simply labeled "overhead." The developer is NOT really supposed to make serious money off the development fee. But I and others have seen that that is not always true.
9y 
CRE, what's your opinion? Comment below:

Just confirming what everyone else has said. 3%, 4%, 5%, etc.

You want to get paid for your work, not just your investment.

Commercial Real Estate Developer

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9y 
TinMan1, what's your opinion? Comment below:
CRE-Finance:

For our LP investing, we like to see half of the dev fee deferred until sale. 1st half paid after the pref

This is more along the lines of what I was thinking. I wasn't sure how the "upfront" fee would look in underwriting the deal with an institution. Someone also mentioned the developer fee not being used as equity which again I agree with.

My buddy is coming in right at 3.5% which is aligned with what everyone is saying, but the upfront fee was something I thought seemed a little ambitious. I see there are a number of ways of distributing the fee and obviously any developer will push to get all upfront.

"Never let success get to your head and never let failure get to your heart"
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9y 
Gentleman and Scholar, what's your opinion? Comment below:

Developers make there $ of fees + promote, with fees covering mostly overhead costs / salaries. A list of fees (non inclusive) are as follows: acquisition fee, leasing override fee, construction management fee, development fee (note that this is independent of the construction management fee). All fees are usually warranted, that is if you are partnering with a developer who knows his shit and has an actual track record. But in all reality, developers will push to have the project burdened with as many fees as possible (within reason obviously).

With that said, the development fee that I typically see is 4.0% of hard & managed soft costs.

9y 
REValuation, what's your opinion? Comment below:

4% is a typical developer fee for a ~$50mm transaction. Some people include the land in the calculation, some dont.

The tax credit examples of deferred fees listed above is typically not applicable to developments that are not using tax credits as part of their capital stack (New market, historical, low income, etc..)

With respect to the comments to "half of the dev fee deferred until sale. 1st half paid after the pref" - Very few experienced/well capitalized developers would agree to this. I have worked for several development firms in various functions, none of which would ever have agreed to any terms this poor. If your an LP, this is one of the "best case" scenarios.

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9y 
CRE, what's your opinion? Comment below:

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Commercial Real Estate Developer

9y 
pere797, what's your opinion? Comment below:

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