REITs vs Direct Real Estate: Returns, Effort, Tax Treatment
The REIT-vs-direct-real-estate debate is one of the most polarized topics in personal finance. Direct-ownership advocates point to leverage, tax benefits, and operational control. REIT advocates point to liquidity, diversification, and zero operational burden. Both sides oversimplify.
Here's the honest comparison: returns, effort, tax treatment, and the situations where each clearly wins.
Returns: After Everything
| Public REITs (VNQ) | Direct Rental Property (leveraged) | |
|---|---|---|
| Historical avg total return | ~8-10% annual (with high volatility) | ~10-15% IRR (with leverage) |
| Returns in down years | 2022: -26.2%, full liquidity to weather | 2022-2023: variable by market, illiquid |
| Cash distributions | ~3-5% yield (mostly ordinary income) | 0-8% cash flow yield (after expenses) |
| Appreciation component | Captured via market-cap changes | Captured via property value + amortization |
| Effort required | Zero | 4-15 hours/month average |
Headline: direct rentals slightly outperform public REITs on total return — IF the leverage works in your favor. Leverage is the key word. A property purchased with 25% down and a 75% mortgage gets 4x exposure on your equity. The 3% appreciation on the property value translates to 12% return on your equity.
The catch: leverage cuts both ways. A 10% drop in property values translates to a 40% loss on your equity. REIT investors don't have this leverage exposure — you only own what you paid for.
Effort: This Is Where People Lie to Themselves
Direct ownership "with property management" is sold as nearly passive. It's not.
What property management does NOT handle:
- Major repair decisions ($3K+ usually requires owner approval)
- Tenant selection in disputed cases
- Eviction decisions and process
- Rent increase strategy and timing
- Capital improvement planning
- Tax preparation and depreciation calculations
- Insurance shopping and claims
- Refinance and debt management decisions
Realistic owner time with PM in place: 4-8 hours/month average, with bad months at 30+ hours. Self-managed: 10-25 hours/month average. Public REITs (VNQ): 0 hours/month.
The 8-12% PM fee + the residual ownership burden eats into the leverage advantage of direct ownership. Net of effort, the gap between REIT returns and direct-ownership returns is much smaller than the gross headlines suggest.
Tax Treatment: Direct Ownership Wins (For High Earners)
Direct-ownership tax advantages:
- Depreciation: Annual deduction of building cost ÷ 27.5 years. On a $200K building basis, that's ~$7,300/year of paper losses. Often shelters all rental income from tax.
- Interest deduction: Mortgage interest is fully deductible against rental income.
- 1031 exchange: Sell one property, roll proceeds into another, defer taxes indefinitely. Powerful for portfolio growth.
- Step-up basis at death: Heirs inherit at current value, eliminating decades of deferred capital gains.
- Real-estate professional status: For very high earners with substantial real-estate holdings, tax classification can shield W-2 income from rental losses.
Public REIT tax disadvantages:
- Distributions are mostly ordinary income (taxed at marginal rate, not the 15-20% qualified dividend rate).
- No depreciation pass-through to investor.
- No 1031 exchange option.
- Step-up at death works the same.
The fix for REIT tax disadvantage: hold REITs in a Roth IRA or Traditional IRA where ordinary-income tax doesn't bite. This neutralizes most of the tax disadvantage.
Liquidity: REITs Win
Public REITs trade every market day. You can sell VNQ at 9:31 AM and have cash 3 days later.
Direct real estate: 60-180 days to sell, with 5-8% transaction costs (broker, closing). And in stress (housing downturn), you might not be able to sell at any reasonable price for 6-12 months. Illiquid asset.
This matters more than people think. A medical emergency, job loss, or divorce can require fast access to capital. Direct real estate doesn't provide that.
Concentration vs Diversification
VNQ holds ~165 different REITs across residential, commercial, industrial, healthcare, and infrastructure sectors, across the US.
One direct rental property: 1 building, 1 market, 1 unit type. Concentrated risk in every dimension.
Building a diversified direct portfolio (5-10 properties across multiple markets) requires $500K-$2M of capital and significant operational scale. For most retail investors, direct ownership = concentrated single-property risk.
The Right Answer (Allocation, Not Either-Or)
For most investors, the right structure is: 5-15% of total portfolio in real estate, mostly via REITs (VNQ in Roth IRA), with 1-2 direct properties only if you actively want to own real estate.
The math:
- $0-$50K total real-estate allocation: VNQ in Roth IRA, full stop. Don't do direct ownership at this scale; diversification is impossible.
- $50K-$200K: VNQ for the bulk, plus consider one direct property if you have specific market knowledge AND want to own real estate.
- $200K+: Mix of VNQ + 1-3 direct properties for tax-advantage capture. Real-estate professional status can become viable at this scale.
Direct ownership beats REITs on total return AND tax treatment. REITs beat direct on liquidity, diversification, and effort-required. The right answer for most retail investors is heavy REIT + small direct exposure if you specifically want it.
For the broader passive-real-estate landscape, see Fundrise vs Roofstock vs Arrived. For the Fundrise vs public REIT comparison, see Fundrise vs REITs. For evaluating direct ownership specifically, see first rental property checklist.
FAQ
Can I get the leverage benefit of direct ownership through leveraged REITs?
There are leveraged REIT ETFs (URE, DRN), but they have severe path-dependency issues with daily rebalancing. They are NOT a substitute for direct-ownership leverage. Use them only for short-term tactical positions, not as core real-estate exposure.
Are private REITs (Fundrise, Realty Mogul) closer to direct ownership or public REITs?
Closer to public REITs in structure (you own a fund interest, not direct property), with worse liquidity (quarterly windows), higher fees (~1.7% all-in), and less tax efficiency. Public REITs in a Roth IRA generally beat private REITs on every dimension except 'price-volatility-looking-lower-because-not-marked-to-market.'
Do REIT distributions qualify for the qualified dividend tax rate?
Mostly no. Most REIT distributions are taxed as ordinary income (your marginal rate), not at the 15-20% qualified dividend rate. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 199A deduction (20% pass-through) helped but didn't eliminate the tax disadvantage. Hold REITs in tax-advantaged accounts.
What's the total real-estate allocation most experts recommend?
5-20% of total portfolio, depending on age and risk tolerance. Younger investors with longer time horizons can run 10-20%. Older investors closer to retirement typically 5-10%. The exact number is less important than the principle: real estate is a diversifier, not the primary engine.