Before You Buy That Senior Housing Property: Are You Acquiring a Performing Asset or an Operational Headache?
Senior housing can be a stable, cash-flowing investment — or a complex liability wrapped in charm. From assisted living to memory care, learn what you really need to know before you close.
Whether you’re a first-time buyer, a regional operator looking to scale, or a private equity group targeting yield, senior housing can offer strong, recession-resilient returns — but only if the deal is properly underwritten and the operation is sound.
Too many buyers fall in love with the real estate, the occupancy snapshot, or a well-run tour. What they don’t see is the under-the-surface complexity: regulatory risk, margin compression, staffing volatility, and deferred CapEx.
So before you sign an LOI, make sure you’re not buying a polished liability disguised as a turnkey opportunity. Here’s your guide to vetting senior housing deals — from independent living to assisted living, memory care, and skilled nursing.
1. Know the Asset Type — and the Risk Profile
Senior housing is not one-size-fits-all. Each asset class has different operational burdens, regulatory oversight, and margin potential:
- Independent Living (IL): Lower acuity, fewer regulations, but sensitive to local competition and market saturation.
- Assisted Living (AL): Mid-acuity care with strong demand drivers, but growing staffing and compliance obligations.
- Memory Care (MC): Higher rates and margin, but more risk if occupancy dips or staffing falters.
- Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs): Heavily regulated, often Medicaid/Medi-Cal dependent, and under reimbursement pressure.
Make sure your team (or partner) has operational experience with the specific license type and acuity level.
2. Occupancy Isn’t the Only Metric That Matters
A 92% occupancy rate looks great — until you dig into:
- Payor mix: Private pay vs. Medicaid vs. Medicare
- Length of stay: Are residents long-term or short-stay?
- Move-in/move-out velocity: Is census stable or being propped up with discounts?
- Lease-up incentives: Are concessions hiding churn?
Look for sustainable census, not just inflated occupancy figures.
3. Review Staff Retention and Wage Pressures
Labor is the lifeblood of senior housing — and also its largest expense. You’ll want to analyze:
- Turnover rate for CNAs, caregivers, and RNs
- Use of agency staffing and associated markup
- Wage compression from state minimum wage increases
- Executive Director (ED) tenure — a high-turnover ED seat is a red flag
- Training and compliance investment
A facility with 80% staff turnover and 20% agency dependency is not operationally stable — no matter how new the granite countertops are.
4. Regulatory Status: Clean or Cautious?
Pull the facility’s state survey history and review for:
- Repeat deficiencies
- Resident complaints
- Licensing actions or provisional licenses
- COVID-era citations or infection control issues
- Pending compliance plans
This should be standard practice — your lender and investors will require it too.
5. What’s the NOI… Really?
Owners love to show pro forma numbers. But real underwriting comes from adjusted TTM (Trailing Twelve Month) performance:
- Pull audited or CPA-reviewed financials
- Reconstruct EBITDA with verified add-backs
- Evaluate margins after normalized staffing
- Account for management fees, real estate taxes, insurance, and CapEx reserves
Lenders will want to see a Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) of at least 1.25x — and you should want a cushion above that.
6. Deferred Maintenance & CapEx: What’s Lurking Behind the Lobby?
Senior housing is capital-intensive. Inspect:
- Roof, HVAC, fire suppression, elevators, kitchen equipment
- Plumbing and electrical in older builds
- ADA compliance
- FF&E needs (beds, chairs, dining furniture)
- Resident room upgrades or refresh schedules
Don’t rely solely on a broker’s estimate. Bring a contractor or facilities manager you trust.
7. Market Feasibility: Is This a Bubble or a Beacon?
Ask:
- Are there new facilities under construction nearby?
- What’s the local demographic (age 75+ growth rate, median income, adult child proximity)?
- Are competitors offering steep concessions or buy-outs?
- Is this location near healthcare services, retail, and transit?
The market absorption rate should support your rent growth and long-term viability — not just today’s occupancy.
8. What Happens When the Seller Leaves?
In senior housing, the seller is often the key operator. When they exit:
- Is there an experienced Administrator or ED staying on?
- Is care staff loyal to management or the owner?
- Will vendor and referral relationships hold?
- Are processes documented — or stuck in the seller’s head?
Without a transition plan, you’re buying census risk — and a potential operational cliff.
9. Reputation & Online Presence
A few poor online reviews can decimate move-in inquiries. Check:
- Google and Yelp reviews
- CMS ratings (for SNFs)
- Local hospital and case manager sentiment
- Social media presence and community engagement
Reputation is a currency — and it takes years to rebuild.
10. Exit Strategy: Can You Sell or Scale It?
Ask yourself:
- Is this part of a platform play?
- Can it roll into a REIT exit?
- Will lenders or PE groups underwrite it in 5–7 years?
- Is there real estate value appreciation?
You should buy with a clear hold period — and a credible exit plan.
Final Thought: Don’t Buy a Brochure — Buy a Business
Senior housing is mission-driven and operationally intense. The right acquisition can build both impact and generational wealth. But the wrong deal will bleed capital, consume time, and risk reputational damage.
Think like an operator. Underwrite like a lender. Close like an investor.
Interested in buying or financing a senior housing facility?
We help buyers secure the right loan structure and walk through the diligence process with clarity, speed, and confidence. From SBA to conventional and bridge-to-HUD options — we speak your language.
Let’s talk.