For Class B value-add apartment owners
Your renovation math works deal by deal.
Fund Launch AI converts your value-add playbook — sourcing, renovation premiums, bridge-to-agency debt, and exit discipline — into a coherent fund: structured terms, an interactive Scroll Deck, a modeled pref-and-promote waterfall, and drafted LPA, PPM, and subscription inputs, all aligned in one source of truth and organized for review by qualified counsel.
Convert your buy box into written acquisition criteria LPs can hold you to
Model pooled-portfolio economics instead of forty separate house spreadsheets
Walk into attorney review with a drafted package, not a blank template
Fund Launch AI helps you prepare and draft. It does not provide legal, tax, investment, or compliance advice, and no capital raise or fund formation is guaranteed.
The fund, in numbers
$100M
Target size
120
Doors modeled
8%
Preferred return
15%
Target gross IRR
150+
Structured fields
10 yr
Hold period
Value-add is a business plan, not just an asset
Class B value-add is the rare strategy where the return comes from an operating intervention: buy at a basis that reflects deferred management, execute a per-unit renovation, capture the rent premium, and exit or refinance at the improved NOI. Structurally, that means the fund isn't underwriting properties — it's underwriting your execution. Deal flow depends on broker relationships and off-market sourcing in specific submarkets. The capital stack is typically bridge debt into agency refinance, which imports interest-rate and exit-timing risk directly into the fund's mechanics. The business plan has hard numbers LPs will test: renovation cost per unit, achieved premium versus underwritten, timeline slippage, occupancy during construction. Term sensitivity is distinct too — promote tiers against a value-creation strategy, capital call scheduling against a renovation calendar, recycling of refinance proceeds mid-fund, and rate-cap policy on floating debt. And because most value-add sponsors arrive from deal-by-deal syndication, the documents have to answer the conversion question explicitly: why a blind pool now, what discretion the manager gains, and what discipline LPs get in exchange. A generic multifamily template doesn't ask any of those questions. Your fund has to answer all of them.
Continuous acquisitions demand a defined buy box and pacing plan — not a single business plan.
DSCR and portfolio debt mean leverage policy must spell out aggregation, cross-collateralization, and refinance behavior.
PM quality, turn costs, and maintenance across scattered assets drive returns more than any single purchase.
Expense assumptions, manager bandwidth, and whether you can deploy at volume without diluting standards.
Acquisition fees on high deal counts, distribution timing against lumpy refinances, and sale proceeds mid-fund.
A qualifying asset defined precisely enough that your buy box is contractual, not aspirational.
A generic real estate template captures none of that.
The syndicator's trap
Deal-by-deal syndication trains bad habits for a fund launch. The deck is the last deal's deck with new photos. The terms evolved raise by raise, so no two sets of investor documents quite match. The waterfall spreadsheet was built for a single asset and quietly breaks when assets pool. And the sponsor's most valuable evidence — realized renovation premiums — lives in scattered post-mortems instead of a structured track record.
The “buy box” lives in your head, so the documents can't enforce the discipline you actually have
Per-house ROI spreadsheets don't aggregate into fund-level economics an LP can evaluate
A syndication-style waterfall gets pasted onto a strategy with continuous acquisitions and rolling refis
Acquisition and management fee stacking across dozens of homes is never modeled — LPs find it first
Nothing explains what happens to refi proceeds: recycle, distribute, or reserve
Your attorney receives a Zillow-flavored strategy summary and bills hours turning it into structure
The build
The conversion from syndicator to fund manager is mostly a documentation problem: everything you already do per deal has to become policy. Buy criteria become acquisition parameters. Your renovation scope becomes a stated business plan. Your refinance instinct becomes recycling language. Fund Launch AI walks that conversion field by field, so the discretion you're asking LPs for is bounded by discipline they can read — and your counsel reviews a coherent fund instead of assembling one.
01
Markets, buy box, price band, rehab scope, management model, target door count, hold and exit logic — in your own words. An existing portfolio becomes track-record context and the template for qualifying assets.
02
Fund Builder converts your system into 150+ structured fields: acquisition criteria, pacing, leverage and refinance policy, fee architecture, reserves, and distribution mechanics — scored against 390+ fund launches.
03
A Scroll Deck that narrates the machine, a pooled waterfall modeled from your actual terms, and drafted LPA, PPM, and sub doc inputs — with benchmarking flags on the terms most likely to draw LP pushback.
04
Send the aligned package to a Fund Launch partner law firm in one click, or hand it to your own attorney. Professional review starts from drafted work that already knows what a qualifying asset is — not a blank page.
The package
Value-add diligence concentrates on three things: whether your premiums are real, whether your debt plan survives a rate move, and whether your terms reward execution rather than acquisition volume. The package Fund Launch AI drafts is built around exactly those pressure points — a track-record-forward narrative, a waterfall whose tiers match your documents, debt and rate-cap language that acknowledges the bridge-to-agency reality, and risk factors that name construction, lease-up, and exit-cap risk in your own strategy's terms.
Strategy narrative: markets, buy box, and the repeatable system behind them
Scroll Deck built around portfolio logic, not a single-deal pro forma
Fund structure and terms tuned for continuous, high-count acquisitions
Pooled waterfall and fund economics with refinance and recycling mechanics
Legal Canvas drafting inputs: LPA, PPM, subscription documents, qualifying-asset definitions
Risk-factor drafting inputs specific to scattered-site SFR operations
Capital deployment and pacing plan LPs can hold you to
Attorney-review package with your full decision record
What the platform asks you
These inputs make the build yours — structured, scored, and threaded through every output.
150+
structured fields
The diligence you'll face
Value-add LPs have seen this movie since 2012 — including the 2022–2023 sequels where bridge debt broke sponsors. Their questions come pre-sharpened.
01
Why should I invest in your fund instead of buying rentals myself?
02
What stops you from stretching the buy box when deal flow gets thin?
03
Your expense assumptions — turns, maintenance, insurance — look tight. What's the evidence?
04
Who manages 150 scattered doors, and what happens when your PM underperforms?
05
When refinances return capital, does it come back to me or get recycled — and who decides?
06
How do acquisition fees work when you're buying forty houses a year?
07
What's the exit: portfolio sale to an aggregator, retail one-offs, or indefinite hold?
08
What happened on your worst deal, and what changed because of it?
Each question maps to a structured field in your build. Achieved-versus-underwritten premiums become a documented track record in the Scroll Deck. Exit-cap sensitivity becomes stated underwriting assumptions. Blind-pool discretion becomes written acquisition parameters. Benchmarking then tells you which answers sit outside market expectations before an LP does — so you adjust the promote tier or the recycling right in the platform, in private, instead of retreating from it in a meeting.
Term sensitivity
01
With continuous deal flow, the written buy box is the LP's only protection against drift. Too loose and it's meaningless; too tight and you can't deploy. This is the term SFR LPs read first.
02
A per-deal fee that's reasonable on one house becomes a headline number across forty. The fee architecture has to be modeled at full pacing, not per transaction.
03
BRRRR-adjacent economics live or die on whether refi proceeds can redeploy. Silence here creates a fight later; clarity here is a selling point.
04
SFR cash flow is steady but refinance events are lumpy. LPs need to know what's distributed monthly or quarterly versus held for redeployment.
05
Portfolio debt, cross-collateralization, and rate exposure across many small loans need explicit boundaries — this is where downside scenarios concentrate.
06
Fee on committed versus deployed capital changes your incentive to pace acquisitions honestly, and LPs in high-velocity strategies check.
07
Scattered-site portfolios eat capital in turns, roofs, and HVAC. A stated per-door and fund-level reserve converts the biggest operational fear into a documented plan.
08
Most SFR funds are one operator's system. LPs will ask what happens to their capital if that operator is gone — the documents should answer before they ask.
The platform, applied
Puts your execution evidence first — realized premiums, business-plan timelines, basis discipline — in an interactive narrative LPs can scroll at diligence depth, with numbers that match your documents.
Converts syndication instincts into fund policy: acquisition parameters, call scheduling, rate-cap language, promote tiers. Ask why a tier is structured that way and get the reasoning to defend it.
Drafts LPA and PPM inputs where the business plan, recycling rights, and leverage policy are already written — so counsel reviews a value-add fund, not a blank multifamily shell.
Models your multi-asset waterfall — pref accrual, tiered promote, catch-up, refi proceeds — from the same terms your documents state, ending the spreadsheet-vs-LPA mismatch that kills credibility.
Flags the value-add terms that draw pushback in the current market: pref levels, tier breakpoints, fee-offset treatment, recycling duration. You see it before the LP meeting.
Change the promote tier once and the deck, model, and drafted docs update together — the fund LPs hear about is the fund the documents describe.
Fit check
Operators with a working SFR system and a real portfolio, ready to pool capital
BRRRR and buy-and-hold practitioners hitting the limits of personal credit and JVs
Teams with property management (in-house or vetted third party) that scales
Managers willing to put their buy box in writing and be held to it
Operators who want counsel reviewing drafted work, not reconstructing strategy
Anyone expecting the platform to supply investors or guarantee a raise
Buyers wanting a “business in a box” with a strategy assigned to them
Operators looking to skip attorney review — final documents require qualified counsel
Anyone seeking legal, tax, investment, or compliance advice from software
Passive-income seekers without an actual acquisition system
FAQ
Can Fund Launch AI handle a value-add multifamily fund specifically?
Yes. The build is organized around value-add's actual mechanics: renovation budgets and premiums, bridge-to-agency debt, tiered promotes, capital calls paced to a business plan, and refinance-proceeds recycling. Benchmarking evaluates those terms against market practice, and drafted language reflects an execution strategy rather than a generic buy-and-hold.
Does it replace my attorney?
No. It upgrades what your attorney starts from. They receive drafted LPA, PPM, and sub doc inputs where your business plan, parameters, and waterfall are already written and internally consistent — then they do the legal judgment and final documents only qualified counsel can provide. One click hands off to a partner firm, or use your own.
Can it build a deck that carries my track record?
Yes. The Scroll Deck structures your realized deals — underwritten versus achieved premiums, timelines, outcomes — into diligence-ready evidence, then narrates the fund thesis on top of it. Traditional deck and one-pager formats generate from the same data, so every version tells the same story.
Can it model a tiered promote across pooled assets?
Yes. The waterfall module models pref accrual, multiple promote tiers, catch-up, and refinance proceeds at the fund level, from the same terms in your drafted documents. That alignment is precisely where syndicators converting to funds usually get caught.
Can it help explain construction and rate risk?
Yes. Risk-factor drafting inputs are written to the strategy: renovation cost overruns, lease-up during construction, floating-rate exposure and cap costs, exit-cap widening. Your attorney finalizes risk language; you hand them substance instead of blanks.
My promote and pref aren't final. Should I wait?
No — structure first, then decide. Enter your working terms, see how benchmarking scores them, model the waterfall at different tiers, and understand the tradeoffs before anything is drafted for review. Terms stay editable, and every change propagates through the package automatically.
What happens when an anchor LP negotiates my terms?
You change the term once — pref, tier breakpoint, fee — and the Scroll Deck, waterfall model, and drafted legal inputs update together, with the new term re-benchmarked. Your counsel sees a clean, current record instead of a trail of contradictory versions.
Is this legal, tax, investment, or compliance advice?
No. Fund Launch AI drafts, structures, models, and benchmarks; it does not advise and is not a law firm, broker-dealer, or registered investment adviser. Final documents and any legal, tax, or compliance determination belong with qualified professionals — the platform's job is to make their review faster and your preparation deeper.
From syndicator to fund manager
Describe the value-add playbook. Structure the blind pool around it — parameters, tiers, waterfall, drafted documents — in one aligned package, pressure-tested against market terms and ready for qualified counsel.
Fund Launch AI does not provide legal, tax, investment, or compliance advice. Fund formation and capital raised are not guaranteed. Final documents should be reviewed by qualified professionals.