Three-Property Rule

The three-property rule allows investors to identify up to three potential replacement properties for the property being sold, regardless of their market value. Only one of the three replacements must be purchased.

Triple Net (NNN) Lease

Triple net leased property does not include any ‘extras’ in the monthly rent. A NNN lease is oftentimes used for free standing property that is occupied by a single tenant, such as a bank building, fast food outlet, or a convenience store.

The Three Ns

The letter ‘N’ means “net of” or excluding. The fixed monthly rent a tenant pays is net of the three major operating expenses of a commercial building:

  1. Property taxes
  2. Insurance on the building to cover damage or vandalism
  3. Maintenance on the building, both interior and exterior, such as roof repairs, electrical and plumbing upkeep, and landscaping

Learn more about Triple Net Leases

Underwriting

Underwriting is the process of evaluating a real estate investment’s risk, financial assumptions, and projected performance before acquiring or offering it to investors. This process often includes analysis of rent rolls, expenses, market conditions, debt, tenant quality, and exit assumptions. NASIS highlights underwriting as a key internal strength.

Value-Add

Value-add refers to an investment strategy in which a property is acquired with the goal of increasing its value through improvements, better management, lease-up, renovation, repositioning, or other operational enhancements. Compared with stabilized core-type assets, value-add properties typically offer greater upside potential along with higher execution risk.