5 Reasons Medical Real Estate Isn’t For You

Medical Real Estate isn’t for you if you aren’t ready for the challenges it will bring. There are easier of real estate you can get involved in, and I will enjoy the advantages of medical real estate for myself. While medical properties can high-quality asset type in theory, without appropriate preparation and expectations, they can burn you.

On the bright side, the barriers to entry make the niche highly defensible. If you have the capability to get in, you get to enjoy less over-crowding of the market than you might in an easier-entry asset class. Everyone and their mother knows about single family homes; only a few know about medical real estate.

Expensive properties

Medical properties require more than entry-level capital. A quality building large enough for more than one doctor is going to cost at least $500,000, and probably more. For most individual investors, that is too much capital to sink into one property. It’s a lot of money to have on hand, and it makes diversification across properties challenging. One way to approach this problem is to form a partnership. With a group of 5 all willing to pitch in $200k you could get a $4 million building leveraged 75%. For passive ownership, there are pooled-capital vehicles that will invest your money in medical buildings—syndications, private funds, REITs, etc.

The bottom line remains. In most cases you need at least $100,000 to invest to get started in medical real estate.

Very particular tenants

Medical tenants have specific needs that you will need to understand in order to be an effective landlord. There are licensing codes and HIPAA restrictions doctors need to comply with, and you may need to facilitate this happening. If a facility is not to code, the medicine must stop until violations are fixed. In a well-run medical practice, that should never happen, but…anything that can happen will happen.

Decision making within a physician group may be shared among many doctor-partners making consensus hard to reach. Doctors will be the first to tell you there are a lot of big egos in the physician community. Real estate decisions can be another point of friction a practice doesn’t need. You can help their business thrive if you understand how to preempt problems and support physician tenants.

Not all medical practices operate effectively, and you need to find the ones that do. Practices partnered with national management companies, healthcare groups, and large, multi-location specialty groups have more operational resources than small, owner-led practices. They hire practice managers for each location and have well established operating systems.

I still love partnering with smaller practices in my investment properties, but only when it makes sense. Many of these are managed and run by the doctors themselves. A practice without an office manager on staff is not conducive to Triple-Net leases. I recommend avoiding the poorly managed practices.

High absorption tenant improvement cost (TI’s)

Medical tenants don’t frequently move, in part because there are very high replacement costs ($240-300 per square foot) for medical office space. But at some point someone pays those costs. The landlord and tenant will negotiate how much each party should pay. If you can front the absorption costs, it attracts tenants and secures top-quality leases. You don’t have to, but that capital is a useful bargaining chip. Physicians leave training with tremendous debt but tremendous earning potential, so many physicians prefer to pay higher lease rates than front the TI costs.

High general demand but low turnover

One of the huge perks of medical real estate is that tenants rarely turn over. Medical tenants rarely outfit a space just to leave after 5 or 10 years. However, that means at any time there may not be many physicians/physician groups looking for new space where your property is located.

If you are trying to attract tenants, you need modernized space at a good price. You may need to connect with a specialized broker or at least have relationships within the local physician community. You can convert the medical space into general office space, but the conversion will rent for less, decreasing value. I recommend having a tenant already in place or a signed a lease subject to satisfactory completion of tenant improvements. Hoping a medical tenant will stumble into your vacant building is risky.

Specialized space

If your tenant does not renew at the end of a lease, what will you do with the highly specialized space? A new medical tenant will require at least a partial renovation. If you shift away from medical tenants, rent will decrease.

You need to understand the intrinsic value in a medical property. Space near a hospital, in a community without many medical facilities, in affluent areas where healthcare reimbursement is higher, etc. are all good ways to increase your chances of releasing to a medical tenant quickly.

Medical real estate offers great opportunities for stable cash-flow, but it is best approached with caution. Ideally partner with someone who has first-hand experience investing in the asset class or with a physician who can help navigate the nuances of the tenant needs. Once you are established and understand the tenant base, invest in these properties for excellent stable income.

The 6 Reasons Medical Real Estate is Great

What are the main reasons Medical Real Estate is great? Simply put, stable, passive income from great tenants.

No looks back on life and says, “I wish I’d spent more time at the office.” Most of us wish we’d shared more time with our families and spent more time on our passions. We want more time at kids’ soccer games, more summer picnics, more time working on a project in the garage. We wish we had more flexibility with our careers, yet still had the resources to provide for those we love. Is there a responsible way to merge these two goals?

We can invest in assets that provide stable cash flow and appreciate over time. We believe that wisely chosen medical real estate properties meet these criteria.

Medical Real Estate can generate stable, relatively low-risk cash-flow with an appreciating underlying hard asset. While many focus on residential real estate, we see 6 main reasons medical real estate is great.

Doctors are “Sticky” Tenants and Sign Long Term Leases

How many times has your doctor or dentist moved in your lifetime? Probably never. And when they did, they probably waited until their old office was extremely outdated. Doctors “stick” in one location for a long time.

Why Do They Stick?

Medical properties are expensive to set up, and patients like convenience and familiarity. Moving a medical practice is extremely costly in terms of overhead costs, lost days of work, and a shift in patient base. Because of this, many medical leases are long-term. I commonly see medical leases in the 7-10+ year range with 3-5 year extension options. Compared to 3-5 years, more typical of a regular commercial tenant, or 1 year for tenants in an apartment building, I’ll choose the medical tenants.

So What?

Tenant turnover costs the landlord money, and vacancy is lost rent. If a tenant guarantees they will stay in one spot for 10 years and they will probably stay at least another 10 after that, you have 20 years without the headache of finding a new tenant. We want stable, passive income, and long term leases are more passive.

NNN Leases

What is a NNN Lease?

Triple net (NNN) leases are common in the medical field. A NNN lease makes the tenant pay utilities, insurance, property tax, maintenance, and property management. Some medical leases called “Absolute” NNN leases also require the tenant to maintain the roof, exterior, and structure as well. 

Why Do You Care?

Picture yourself on vacation with your family. You don’t have to worry about the extra time away from work because you get a cool $3,000 direct deposited into your bank account each month from your investment property. Right before you go out for a special day trip you planned, you get a call.

“Hello? Yes, the bathroom sink is leaking on the floor. We thought you would want to know”

You don’t have a NNN lease, and it’s your responsibility to take care of this. Since water damages everything, you can’t leave a leaking sink for a few extra days. Goodbye, day trip plans. Sayonara, relaxed state of mind. Adios, overpriced plumbing invoice to pay for service fast.

NNN leases decrease your exposure to costs, both routine and unexpected. They also decrease the time you need to put into the investment. For the sake of simple, stable cash-flow, this is amazing, and you won’t get it with an apartment complex.

Do yourself a favor and stick with NNN.

Strong tenants that are not correlated with the market

Medical practices are high-income, stable businesses with government and private payor sources. Beyond the high billing rates in medicine, the demand for medical services is steady and increasing. As baby-boomers age and Americans struggle with obesity, the demand for healthcare just goes up.

Medical tenants tend to do better during economic downturns than retail, office, or hospitality. The government backs healthcare expenditure through good times and bad. Healthcare is not optional. Unlike many residential and other commercial tenants, medical properties have almost uniformly paid rent through the COVID pandemic. They are forecasted for strong post-COVID outlook.

Requisite in-person

As e-commerce takes over retail and many jobs remain remote through the Covid-19 pandemic, there is concern that brick and mortar stores are on the decline. However, many medical appointments (anything involving a test or examination) and all procedures must be done in-person. Reports such as the JLL 2020 healthcare real estate outlook, indicate tele-health will augment care more than replace it.

Less Location Dependent
Medical practices do not require core urban areas to thrive, which allows for value real estate purchases. As long as the usual fundamentals – revenue, expenses, and tenant strength are in place – success should follow. Due to national standards and local factors, medical revenues are often solid in secondary and tertiary markets. Just as in other real estate classes, a strong tenant is the key to success – national and regional companies as well as robust physician practices must remain local to stay viable.

Why is this one of the reasons medical real estate is great?

Property costs relative to rent in secondary and tertiary markets are lower than in urban cores. Capitalization rates are higher. This means we get a higher return on each investment, but we believe the medical investments are just as safe.

Market Inefficiency

Buildings in the $1-5 million range are too small for a large funds to purchase, but too expensive average real estate investor. You want to capture value while avoiding bidding wars with over-eager entry-level investors or large funds. Investing with a group that pools resources (partnership, syndication) to make strategic purchases in this real estate market is a great way to do this

You can invest in medical real estate and for stable, secure cash-flow. You can find deals in the space to make that cashflow pretty attractive for relatively little landlord responsibility. Real estate acquisition and management fundamentals still apply, and you will need to understand the unique tenant base, but it can work and be great.

If you agree with these reasons medical real estate is great and you want to learn more, reach out to us at Jacob@fallcreekpartners.com.