What every passive real estate investor needs to understand before they’re in this moment.
You invested passively in a real estate deal. You did your diligence on the sponsor. You signed the documents, wired the capital, and started receiving distributions. Everything was going according to plan.
Then you got an email.
Subject line: “Important Update on Your Investment.”
It wasn’t a distribution notice. It was a capital call. The sponsor needed additional capital from investors to keep the deal moving forward.
If you’ve been investing in real estate syndications for any length of time, you’ve either already received one of these or you will. And the investors who handle them well are the ones who understood what they were before they found themselves in the middle of one.
This post covers what capital calls actually are, why this market cycle has produced so many of them, what your real options are, and how to evaluate what you’re being asked to do before you make a decision.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Any investment involves risk, and you should consult your financial advisor, attorney, or CPA before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The author and associated entities disclaim any liability for loss incurred as a result of the use of this material or its content.
What a Capital Call Actually Is
A capital call is a request from a sponsor for additional investment capital beyond what you originally committed. It is not a margin call. It doesn’t mean the deal is automatically in trouble.
Here’s something that often gets missed in these conversations: a capital call is almost always the last thing a sponsor wants to send.
Think about it from their side. They raised money from investors who trusted them with that capital. Sending a capital call means going back to those same people and saying, we need more. No operator does that lightly. By the time that email goes out, they’ve typically already looked at every other option, stress-tested the numbers, and talked to their lenders. This is where they landed.
That doesn’t mean every capital call represents good news. But it usually means the sponsor is fighting for the deal rather than walking away from it. That context matters when you’re deciding how to respond.
Why You’re Seeing More of These Right Now
If it feels like capital calls have become more common over the last two to three years, that’s because they have. And there’s a specific reason for it.
The Federal Reserve raised interest rates 525 basis points between March 2022 and July 2023. That is the fastest tightening cycle in roughly 40 years. Many real estate deals underwritten in 2020 and 2021 were built around a very different rate environment. Low rates, abundant debt, strong rent growth. That environment is gone, and the deals that were structured around it are feeling the pressure.
A few specific dynamics are driving the capital calls you’re seeing today:
Floating rate bridge loans
A lot of value-add multifamily deals were financed with short-term floating rate debt. The business plan was to renovate, stabilize, and refinance into long-term fixed debt within two to three years. When rates rose and values softened, that refinance either became impossible or required significant additional equity to close the gap. Deals that looked fine at origination ran into a wall they didn’t see coming.
Rate cap expirations
When sponsors took out floating rate debt, lenders required them to purchase interest rate caps to limit exposure. Those caps are expiring now, two to three years later. Renewing them at today’s rates costs significantly more than the original caps did. That’s a real cash need that wasn’t in the original budget.
Rising operating costs
Property insurance premiums have increased substantially in many markets, particularly in the South and Southeast. Labor and materials costs for renovations came in higher than projected. These aren’t excuses. They’re real line items that moved against deals that had little margin to absorb them.
Rent growth stalled
In many markets, the strong rent growth that operators underwrote to support their projections slowed or reversed as new supply came online. That affected cash flow and made refinancing at favorable terms harder to execute.
None of this is unique to one sponsor or one market. This is a cycle-wide pressure that has stressed deals across the industry. Many sponsors who are sending capital calls today are not bad operators. They are operators who made reasonable assumptions in 2020 and 2021 that the rate environment made untenable. The ones handling it well are the ones communicating clearly, coming to investors with a plan, and standing behind their commitments.
That context doesn’t mean you write a check automatically. It means you evaluate the situation with the right frame.
Why They Happen
Within that broader market context, capital calls are triggered by a specific gap between what the original underwriting projected and what the deal is actually experiencing.
The most common causes:
- Bridge loan maturity. The deal was financed with short-term debt, and that debt is coming due. The sponsor needs capital to extend, refinance, or pay it down.bbbbbb
- Floating rate debt repricing. The numbers that worked at acquisition stopped working when rates moved.
- Rate cap expiration. The caps are expiring and renewing them at current rates costs more than the original budget allowed.
- Unexpected capital expenditures. Something the inspection didn’t catch. A repair the reserve fund can’t absorb.
- Occupancy shortfall. The property isn’t leasing at the pace the business plan assumed, and operating income is below projections.
The size of the ask matters too. I’ve received capital calls ranging from 7% of my original investment all the way up to 40%. Those are not the same conversation. A 7% ask to renew a rate cap is relatively contained. A 40% ask to restructure debt on a struggling asset is a fundamentally different situation and deserves a fundamentally different level of scrutiny.
The size of the ask is the first signal. It tells you something about the scope of the problem before you’ve read a single word of the memo.
This Is a New Investment Decision
Here’s the most important framing for this moment.
When you receive a capital call, you are not just deciding whether to send money. You are making a new investment decision with updated information.
When you evaluated this deal the first time, you looked at the sponsor’s track record, the market conditions, the business plan, the projected returns, and the risk factors. You need to do that same work again. The situation has changed. The analysis has to change with it.
Here is what you need to get clear on before you make any decision:
What is the money specifically for?
Not a general explanation. A specific use of funds. Is it to extend a loan, cover a renovation, stabilize occupancy, shore up reserves? The more specific the answer, the better sign. Vague answers to this question are a red flag.
A sponsor who knows what they’re doing can tell you exactly where every dollar is going.
What does the revised business plan look like?
Not just what went wrong. Where is the deal going from here? What’s the updated timeline? What are the new projections given current market conditions? Does the math still make sense, or is this capital call just buying time on a deal with no real path to recovery?
Those are two very different situations.
What happens if the capital call isn’t met?
This is the question most investors forget to ask. Get a direct answer. Is there a default risk? Could the lender foreclose? Is a sale being considered? Is there a plan B? Y
ou need to understand the downside of saying no, not just the upside of saying yes.
Is the sponsor contributing additional capital alongside LPs?
A sponsor who puts more of their own money in is a meaningfully different signal than one who is not. It tells you they believe in the revised plan. It tells you they have skin in the game.
What does the capital call memo actually show you?
Sponsors send these with supporting documents. Read them carefully. Look for a clear breakdown of how the funds will be used. Look for updated financial projections that reflect current conditions, not the original underwriting. Look for a realistic exit timeline. And look for what the sponsor has already done to stabilize the deal before sending this request.
If a sponsor can’t answer these questions clearly, that is as much information as the capital call itself.
Your Two Options
Once you’ve done the diligence, you have three actual options. None of them is automatically right.
1. Contribute.
You evaluate the revised plan, it holds up under scrutiny, the ask is proportionate to what’s needed, and you decide to put in more capital. I’ve done this.
There have been deals where contributing was clearly the right call because the asset was fundamentally sound, the issue was market-driven rather than operational, the sponsor had a credible plan, and they were putting in capital alongside investors.
That combination of factors changes the calculus.
2. Pass.
The revised plan doesn’t hold up. The numbers don’t work even with new capital. The sponsor can’t give you a clear picture of the path forward. Or the ask is too large relative to what you can realistically recover.
I’ve passed on capital calls too. And I’ll be honest: passing is uncomfortable.
Here’s why. When you decline and other LPs contribute, your equity position gets diluted. Here’s what that actually looks like.
Say you invested $100,000 in a deal where total LP equity is $2 million. That’s a 5% ownership stake. Now there’s a capital call for $400,000. You decline. Other LPs contribute. Total equity is now $2.4 million. Your $100,000 stake is now roughly 4.2%.
You still own a piece of the deal. But it’s a smaller piece. That’s the real cost of passing, and it’s worth running the math before you decide. If you’re weighing how to offset potential loss from capital calls, understanding dilution is step one.
Sometimes that cost is worth absorbing if the deal doesn’t have a credible future. Sometimes it isn’t. That’s a judgment call that only you can make with the information in front of you.

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Not All Capital Calls Are the Same
This is worth saying directly.
There is a meaningful difference between a sponsor who hit a market condition they couldn’t control, maintained transparent communication throughout, explored every alternative before asking investors for more, came back with a specific use of funds and a credible revised plan, and put their own capital in alongside yours.
And a sponsor who mismanaged the asset, gave vague or infrequent updates, and is now asking for more money without being able to clearly explain what changes and why the new capital solves the problem.
The capital call itself doesn’t tell you which situation you’re in. The quality of the communication, the specificity of the plan, the sponsor’s track record leading up to this moment, and how they’ve behaved when things got hard, that’s what tells you.
A good operator in a bad market is a fundamentally different situation from a bad operator in any market. How you respond should reflect that difference. Understanding when a real estate deal doesn’t go as planned — and what your options actually are — is what separates reactive investors from informed ones.
The Standard for Making the Decision
A capital call is not a verdict on your investment. It’s a decision point.
The worst thing you can do is respond emotionally. Contributing more money because you’re afraid of losing what you have is not a strategy. Passing because the ask makes you uncomfortable isn’t either.
The standard is the same one you applied going in: evaluate the sponsor, the revised plan, and the underlying asset. Ask the hard questions. Get specific answers. Run the dilution math if you’re considering passing. If you want a broader lens on managing investment risk across your portfolio, that context helps here too. Then make a decision you can stand behind.
Investors who navigate capital calls well aren’t the ones who never receive them. They’re the ones who know what to do when they do.
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Peter Kim, MD is the founder of Passive Income MD, the creator of Passive Real Estate Academy, and offers weekly education through his Monday podcast, the Passive Income MD Podcast. Join our community at the Passive Income Doc Facebook Group.
Disclaimer: I am not a CPA, attorney, or financial advisor. The information in this post is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as tax, legal, or financial advice. Please consult a qualified professional about your specific situation before making any decisions.
Further Reading
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