
Property Accounting: Why Most Systems Are Broken and How to Fix Them
March 2, 2026
CPA Rental Property: When You Need a Real Estate CPA vs. Bookkeeper (and How to Avoid Expensive Mistakes)
March 14, 2026Real Estate Accountant: What They Actually Do (And Why Most Operators Get It Wrong)
Key Takeaways
- Most real estate operators know something is “off” in their numbers but can’t tell whether they need a bookkeeper, controller, or full-blown CFO—this confusion leads to hiring the wrong help and creating bigger messes as they scale.
- Real estate bookkeeping handles transactions, while real estate accounting and controller-level work delivers reporting, analysis, internal controls, and investor readiness.
- Real estate accounting is structurally different from general small-business accounting: accrual vs. cash basis, property-level vs. entity-level ledgers, intercompany transactions, and waterfall/investor reporting all require specialized knowledge.
- Concrete warning signs that you need a specialized real estate accountant include delayed monthly close, unreliable DSCR calculations, investor questions you can’t answer, and lenders pushing back on your financials.
- For operators under approximately 1,000 units, outsourced real estate accounting and controller services (like 20 Mile) offer the expertise of a full-time hire at a fraction of the cost.
- Specialized accounting services for real estate professionals include tax planning, compliance, financial reporting, and investment support.
Intro: Why You’re Probably Searching “Real Estate Accountant” Right Now
You’re not searching “real estate accountant” because you woke up curious about accounting theory. You’re here because something is broken—or feels broken—and you can’t quite pinpoint what.
Maybe it’s Q4 2025, and your lender just asked for an updated T-12 on that 96-unit multifamily you refinanced in 2023. You pulled reports from AppFolio, exported from QuickBooks, and somehow the numbers don’t match. Your DSCR looks different depending on which spreadsheet you open.
Or maybe an investor emailed in January 2026 asking why Q3 distributions were lower than Q2. You know occupancy held steady. You think expenses were normal. But when you try to explain it clearly, you realize you can’t—because your books don’t tell a coherent story.
Here’s the real problem: most real estate operators lump “bookkeeping, accounting, and finance” into a single category and then hire the wrong type of help. A local bookkeeper who’s great with the local bakery business can’t build investor reporting packages. An offshore team that’s fast with data entry doesn’t understand accrual-based financials or intercompany transactions. And a CPA who only sees your books once a year at tax time isn’t positioned to fix the structural mess that’s been building for three years.
This article will give you a clear definition of what a real estate accountant actually does, explain how real estate accounting works differently from normal small-business accounting, show you the warning signs that you’ve outgrown your current setup, and lay out your options—including outsourced controllers like 20 Mile.

What a Real Estate Accountant Actually Does
A real estate accountant is the person—or team—responsible for the accuracy and integrity of property-level and entity-level financials across your portfolio. Real estate accountants maintain accurate financial records and produce comprehensive financial reports for real estate professionals, ensuring transparency and compliance. This spans everything from day-to-day classification of income and expenses through monthly close, reporting, compliance support, and lender/investor readiness.
This isn’t just a back-office data entry clerk. And it’s not necessarily a tax strategist or CFO. In practice, a real estate accountant combines two traditional roles:
- A senior accountant who understands GAAP and real estate mechanics (accruals, fixed assets, debt amortization, capital accounts)
- A controller-type person who designs and enforces the monthly close, reporting packages, and internal controls
Core responsibilities include:
- Monthly close per property and entity: Reconciling bank accounts, loan accounts, escrow/impound accounts, and security deposit accounts for each property. Recording accruals for property taxes, insurance, utilities, and management fees so monthly NOI reflects economic reality—not just cash timing.
- CAM and NNN reconciliations: For commercial assets or mixed-use properties, tracking budgeted vs. actual common area maintenance, preparing annual CAM reconciliations for 2025 leases, and ensuring tenants are billed correctly.
- Capex and project tracking: Setting up specific GL accounts for rehab projects, tracking spend against budgets, ensuring proper capitalization vs. expense treatment, and coordinating with draw requests to lenders.
- Debt schedules and interest reserves: Maintaining amortization schedules for each loan (agency, bank, private, construction facilities), recording principal and interest correctly each month, and tracking interest reserves and draw schedules.
- Chart of accounts design: Building GL structures that align with lender templates and investor reporting—not generic categories that lump everything into “miscellaneous.”
- Reporting packages: Property-level income statements with comparisons to budget and prior year, balance sheets per entity, cash flow statements, and key metrics like DSCR, occupancy, and per-unit operating costs.
In addition to these core responsibilities, real estate accountants provide accounting services such as budgeting and forecasting, helping clients avoid unexpected cash flow issues. Real estate accountants handle financial activity related to property transactions, reconcile accounts, manage payables and receivables, and may assist property management team with ad-hoc projects. They manage the financial heartbeat of property-based businesses, delivering accurate records, confirming compliance with regulations, and providing strategic analyses. Hiring a real estate accountant provides tremendous benefits to property investors, landlords, developers, and agencies by adding professional financial expertise to ensure streamlined operations and enhanced profitability. Effective real estate accounting helps companies make strategic decisions, maximize returns, and minimize risks.
A real estate accountant often sits between your property management software (AppFolio, Buildium, Yardi, Rent Manager) and your investors or lenders, translating raw data into accurate financial statements. They also coordinate with external tax CPAs and auditors for year-end 2024 and forward, preparing trial balances, fixed asset ledgers, and debt schedules—though they don’t replace specialized tax advice.
Bookkeeping vs. Controller-Level Work: The Difference That Really Matters
When operators say “I need a real estate accountant,” they often mean three different things: bookkeeper, accountant, or controller. Each has different skills and different price points. Accountant-level work often includes tax and accounting services, such as tax preparation and compliance support for real estate businesses.
Real Estate Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping is transactional data entry and basic reconciliations:
- Posting rent receipts from your property management software
- Coding utility bills to the correct expense categories
- Matching deposits from tenants or Airbnb payouts
- Managing vendor W-9s and basic 1099 prep support
- Reconciling bank statements to catch unauthorized transactions
This is essential foundational work, but it’s focused on recording what happened—not analyzing it or ensuring it’s presented correctly for stakeholders.
Accountant-Level Work
Accountant-level work goes deeper:
- Maintaining accrual-based books (recording revenue when earned and expenses when incurred, not just when cash moves)
- Reviewing settlement statements and setting up starting Balance Sheets for new deals.
- Recording loan amortization on a 10-year Fannie Mae multifamily loan
- Performing monthly reconciliations across multiple bank accounts, credit cards, and loan balances
- Tracking and reconciling intercompany due-to/due-from balances across multiple LLCs
- Assisting CPA firm during tax preparation and maintaining accurate financial records for compliance and reporting
Controller-Level Work
Controller-level work brings structure and oversight:
- Designing the monthly close process with defined deadlines (e.g., closing each month by the 10th of the following month)
- Creating standardized reporting packages for investors and lenders, segmented by property, entity, and fund
- Implementing internal controls: approval thresholds for payments, separation of duties, policies for security deposit handling
- Overseeing compliance with loan covenants (DSCR, LTV, occupancy requirements)
- Analyzing performance variance vs. budget and underwriting
Most operators under approximately 1,000 units don’t need a full-time CFO focused on capital markets and M&A strategy. But they absolutely need controller-level thinking layered on top of accurate bookkeeping. This is where the gap usually exists.
Why Real Estate Accounting Is Different From “Normal” Accounting
Real estate is capital-intensive and debt-heavy. Errors in accounting don’t just create messy books—they directly impact DSCR, loan covenants, and your ability to refinance or sell in 2026–2027.
Accrual vs. Cash Basis
Most small businesses can operate internally on cash-basis accounting. Real estate can’t—at least not for syndications.
GAAP and most lenders require accrual-based financials. This means:
- Rental income is recognized when earned (based on lease terms), with receivables and allowance for bad debts where appropriate
- Expenses are recognized when incurred, not when paid—property taxes accrue monthly even if paid semi-annually, and insurance premiums are expensed over the coverage period
The local bookkeeper or offshore accounting firm in most cases will not have the educational background or industry experience to handle to complexity of this level of accounting.
Investor Reporting Requirements
Real estate syndications and JV structures typically include:
- Preferred return (e.g., 8% cumulative) to LPs
- Catch-up provisions for the GP
- Promote/carried interest above certain IRR thresholds
- Capital accounts tracking contributions, distributions, and allocated income/loss per K-1
A real estate accountant will often work with the investment team to ensure the waterfall model from underwriting aligns with actual books—contributions, distributions, and profits allocated in the GL. They calculate and track preferred return accruals monthly or quarterly, not just at year-end, so investors receive accurate reporting on what they’re owed. Comprehensive and accurate financial reporting is essential to attract investors and build credibility for future funding or partnerships.
Lender Expectations
Banks and agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, HUD) demand:
- Timely delivery of property-level financials (monthly or quarterly)
- Trailing-12 P&Ls and rent rolls with unit-level detail
- Evidence of compliance with DSCR, occupancy, and reserve requirements
- Clean tie-out between financial statements and loan covenants
In 2024 and beyond—with higher interest rates and tighter underwriting—banks are less tolerant of sloppy reporting. It increases perceived risk and may lead to higher reserve requirements, restricted distributions, or blocked refinances.

Signs You Need a Real Estate Accountant (Now, Not Next Year)
If you’re a scaling operator managing assets in 2026, these pain points might feel familiar:
Your monthly close takes over 20 days—or never really “closes” at all. Numbers continuously change as new transactions get back-coded months later. If months aren’t closed by a consistent deadline with locked GL for past periods, you’re flying blind operationally.
You don’t trust your own reports. You’ve said things like:
- “I know the P&L is wrong, but I don’t know exactly how.”
- “If I run the same report three different ways, I get three different answers.”
- “My DSCR seems to change every time we export to Excel.”
Investors and lenders are asking questions you can’t answer. An LP emails mid-2025 asking NOI fluctuates so much from month-to-month while occupancy remains steady. A bank delays your refinance because your 2025 financials don’t tie out to the tax return. You can’t clearly explain why Q3 distributions were lower than Q2.
Banks are asking for your PFS and Internal Corporate Financials: It has become a standard practice for banks to request these documents from sponsor, particularly when they are personally guaranteeing. Not having reliable, clean internal financials that are update at least quarterly is a huge red flag and will often prevent deals from moving forward.
Operational visibility has disappeared. You can’t say, by property:
- What your current-year capex spend is vs. budget
- How much remains in construction or capex reserves
- Whether security deposits are commingled with operating cash
- Whether property managers are paying vendors from the wrong entity
You’ve scaled faster than your systems. Going from 50 to 350 units, taking on JV partners for the first time, entering a new asset class (your first small industrial or self-storage asset), or taking your first agency loan with covenants—any of these reveals that what “worked” at 50 units breaks at 150.
What Bad Real Estate Accounting Actually Costs You
The real cost isn’t bookkeeping fees. Inaccurate accounting can negatively impact property sales and real estate sales by undermining buyer and lender confidence, leading to deals that don’t happen, refinances that fall apart, and partners who lose confidence.
DSCR and Covenant Issues
Consider a multifamily deal underwritten at 1.25x DSCR in 2022. By 2024, it looks like 1.05x in your financials because capitalizable improvements were expensed, one-time costs were treated as recurring, or owner-specific overhead was left at the property level.
Lenders can:
- Block distributions
- Require additional reserves or partial paydowns
- Refuse consent to refinance or supplemental loans
- Trigger default remedies (though rare absent true distress)
Project-level underwriting falls apart when the trailing-12 NOI you present to a buyer isn’t supported by clean books. Buyers discount or retrade if they perceive NOI figures as unreliable.
Missed or Late Filings
- Late 1099 filings for vendors (penalties can range from tens to hundreds of dollars per late/missing form)
- Sales and occupancy taxes on short-term rentals not tracked correctly
- Missed or inaccurate tax bills can result in penalties and increased tax liability for real estate professionals
The cleanup cost is significant: CPAs and attorneys often charge materially higher fees to remediate multiple years of sloppy books. Multi-entity cleanups across 2023–2025 can easily become five-figure projects.
Investor Trust Erosion
When capital accounts don’t tie to actual contributions and distributions, or when preferred returns are miscalculated:
- Investors may receive incorrect distributions (either underpaid—leading to anger—or overpaid—difficult to claw back)
- Restated financials or corrected K-1s for prior years erode confidence
- Inaccurate accounting undermines investing decisions and makes it harder for investors to trust the information they rely on.
- Future raises become harder, often requiring sweeter terms (higher pref, higher promote) to overcome skepticism
- Extreme cases lead to partner fights, buyouts, and litigation
Deal-Level Fallout
For sales in 2026 and beyond, buyers and their lenders scrutinize:
- Trailing-12 property financials vs. offering memorandum
- Consistency of NOI across periods and against bank statements
If financials are inconsistent, missing, or obviously misclassified, buyers reduce their offered price or walk away entirely. Refinances relying on optimistic NOI get delayed or fall through if the lender’s underwriter can’t reconcile your statements.
Your Options: In-House, Offshore, or Fractional/Outsourced
By the time you’re reading this, you have three realistic paths forward. A real estate firm can choose from various accounting services to meet its financial management needs, ensuring compliance, accurate record-keeping, and effective tax planning.
Full-Time In-House Accountant/Controller
Pros:
- Proximity to your team—can attend operations meetings and develop deep property knowledge
- Direct control over processes and reporting formats
- Continuity and institutional knowledge
Cons:
- Higher fixed cost: $85,000–$150,000+ salary plus benefits and overhead in major U.S. markets
- Recruiting difficulty—good real estate accountants are in demand
- Management overhead—you must supervise and train this hire
- Often “over-hired” for current scale: a full-time controller may be needed to perform lower skill data entry tasks because they are the only accountant on the team.
- In-house staff can gain experience in real estate accounting, which is valuable for long-term growth but may require additional training and development time
Offshore or Generalized Bookkeeping Firms
Pros:
- Lower hourly rates (often a fraction of U.S. salaries)
- Can handle large volumes of transactional work
- Scalable processing capacity
Cons:
- Limited domain expertise in U.S. real estate accounting
- Most bookkeepers do not have any formal accounting education and are unqualified to handle anything more than simple cash basis accounting and A/P.
- Context gap: time zones, language, and lack of exposure to on-the-ground operations
- Rarely provides controller-level oversight
- Can create more volume of low-quality data rather than fewer high-quality insights
Fractional/Outsourced Controller Models
Pros:
- Specialization: teams focused on real estate see many portfolios and bring proven charts of accounts, close checklists, and reporting templates
- Cost-effectiveness: controller-level expertise plus bookkeeping execution at a blended cost below a full-time senior hire
- Flexibility: scales up during busy times (year-end, acquisitions) and down during slower periods
- Process installation: standardized close checklists, reporting templates, and internal control frameworks
- Supports long-term planning and strategic financial management, helping real estate businesses with asset valuation and maximizing return on investment over time
Cons:
- Perceived loss of control (though well-structured relationships include governance and review calls)
- Everything is remote/virtual (though this is increasingly normal for real estate operations)

Why Outsourced Real Estate Accounting Wins for Most Operators Under ~1,000 Units
Unless you’re a vertically integrated platform with thousands of units or heavy development across multiple states, a full-time in-house controller is usually overkill. Outsourced accounting services offer comprehensive support for real estate operators, providing expertise in tax planning, legal compliance, financial record-keeping, and investment growth.
Cost Dynamics
At roughly 1,000- 1,500 units or less, a 100% dedicated controller at $135,000+ salary plus benefits and overhead doesn’t pencil out.
For operators managing multiple properties, outsourced accounting is especially beneficial, as it provides scalable support tailored to the complexities of handling numerous real estate assets.
A well-structured outsourced arrangement delivers:
- Senior controller-level oversight (10–30 hours/month depending on complexity)
- Staff-level bookkeeping and accounting (reconciliations, journal entries, accruals)
- All-in monthly fees significantly less than fully-loaded cost of a full-time senior hire
Expertise and Pattern-Recognition
Outsourced real estate teams handle dozens of similar portfolios across multifamily, self-storage, SFR portfolios, and small commercial. They bring:
- Standardized charts of accounts aligned with lender templates and underwriting
- Mature monthly close checklists tuned for PMS integration, intercompany, and accruals
- Real industry experience – eliminating the need to train and develop.
- Exposure to “what good looks like” and “what bad looks like” so they can proactively flag issues
Flexibility and Scalability
An outsourced structure can scale:
- Start with a cleanup project (fixing 2025 books), then move into ongoing monthly work
- Add capacity as you add doors or entities without committing to new full-time headcount
- Flex during busy periods (year-end, acquisitions, dispositions) without permanent overhead
Risk Reduction
Relying on one internal “accounting person” is a single point of failure. If they quit, go on leave, or get overwhelmed, you’re stuck.
Outsourced firms typically have multiple team members documented on the account plus standardized processes, ensuring continuity even if individual staff changes. If you later grow to the point of building an internal team, they inherit a coherent, robust system rather than a mess.
How 20 Mile Fits In: Our Role as Your Real Estate Accountant & Controller
At 20 Mile, we specialize in outsourced accounting and controller services for real estate operators primarily under 1,000 units—or equivalent deal volume with complex capital structures. We offer specialized services tailored to property management, asset management, and vertically integrated firms – providing comprehensive financial support need to help you scale.
Our core services include:
- Property- and entity-level bookkeeping on an accrual basis
- Monthly close within a defined timeframe (typically by the 10th business day)
- Lender-ready financials: property-level P&Ls, balance sheets, trailing-12s that tie to loan docs
- Internal corporate FP&A buildout to improve decision making and help you scale
- Assist tax CPAs (clean trial balances, equity rolls, K-1 support) to ensure K-1’s are delivered prior to extension deadline.
We work with the systems you already use: AppFolio, Buildium, QuickBooks Online, or similar tools. We implement standardized charts of accounts tailored to multifamily, SFR portfolios, and small commercial assets.
We help clean up legacy books (2025 and earlier), implement a consistent close process going forward, and build reporting that ties directly to your underwriting and asset management models.
Ready to stop guessing whether your books are right? Schedule a short discovery call, share your current unit count and capital structure, and let us perform a light diagnostic on your existing books and reporting. We’ll tell you exactly what you need—and whether we’re the right fit.
FAQ: Real Estate Accountant
These questions address practical concerns from active operators rather than accounting students or job seekers.
What are the typical steps to become a real estate accountant?
To become a real estate accountant, you typically need to earn a bachelor’s degree in accounting, finance, or a related field. After obtaining your degree, it’s important to gain experience in accounting, ideally within the real estate industry, to build foundational skills and expertise. Many real estate accountants choose to obtain a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) license, which can improve job prospects, enhance salary potential, and increase credibility when working with real estate professionals. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the job outlook for accountants, including real estate accountants, is expected to grow by 7% from 2020 to 2030.
Do I need a CPA, or is a specialized real estate accountant enough?
For day-to-day property and entity accounting—books, monthly close, reporting—a real estate accountant or controller with deep industry experience is usually more important than a CPA credential. However, obtaining a CPA license can enhance job opportunities and salary potential, and many of the best real estate accountants are also CPA’s.
A licensed CPA is essential for handling complex tax planning and representing you before the IRS. Most operators pair an outsourced accounting/controller team with an external CPA firm for tax filings and high-level structuring.
The practical split: your real estate accountant owns books, monthly close, and financial reporting. Your CPA handles tax filings, tax deductions strategy, and audit/lender requests requiring attestation.
When is the right time to bring in an outsourced real estate accountant?
The best time is usually when you move beyond 1–2 small properties or cross roughly 100 units, or when you bring in outside investors or institutional lenders for the first time.
Concrete milestones include: first syndication in 2024, first agency loan, shifting from flipping to holding rental properties, or growing from one LLC to multiple property and holding entities.
Many clients come in “late”—during or right after a painful tax season—and discover that the earlier they’d engaged help, the cheaper and smoother the cleanup would have been.
How long does it take to clean up my existing books?
Realistic ranges depend on complexity:
Scenario | Timeline |
|---|---|
Light cleanup (1–2 properties, single year only, fairly complete records) | 2–4 weeks |
Moderate cleanup (3–8 properties, several entities, issues across 1–2 years) | 30–60 days |
Heavy cleanup (10+ entities, 1-2 years, convoluted intercompany, corporate book set up required) | 60–90 days |
During cleanup, good outsourced teams still support current-month activity so you don’t fall further behind while past periods are being fixed.
Can an outsourced team work with my existing property manager?
Yes—the typical model is collaborative and layered:
- Property managers handle rent collection, tenant charges, and daily operations
- In-house admin may assist with document gathering and vendor questions
- Outsourced accountant/controller leads the close, posts accruals, and prepares reporting
This lets you keep operational knowledge in-house while upgrading the sophistication and reliability of your financial reporting.
How much should I expect to invest in specialized real estate accounting?
20 Mile’s outsourced real estate accounting and controller support for a growing portfolio typically costs 20-30% less than building out an internal US-based team.
Pricing varies with complexity: number of entities, number of properties and units, volume of monthly transactions, and whether historical cleanup is required.
Request a scoped proposal after sharing your current portfolio, systems, and pain points. That lets you compare outsourced costs with the real cost of in-house hires—or continuing with incomplete financials that cost you on every refinance, sale, and investor conversation.






