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By Sondra Barr, Director of Communications  ·  info@vestmont.com

Mixed-use is the hardest product type to comp in commercial real estate. A 150-unit apartment building with 12,000 sf of ground-floor retail is not a multifamily deal. It's not a retail deal. It's both — and the valuation methodology for each component pulls in different directions.

Most brokers and appraisers handle this by picking the dominant use and comping the whole asset against single-product peers. That approach produces BOVs that are either too high or too low, and sellers and buyers both end up frustrated.

Where the comps break down

The typical mixed-use asset in the Phoenix metro is 70–80% residential by revenue and 20–30% commercial (retail, restaurant, office, or medical). The temptation is to comp it as multifamily with a "retail kicker." Here's why that doesn't work:

How to build a defensible BOV

The right approach is a component-level valuation with a blended conclusion. Here's the framework we use:

  1. Value the residential component independently. Use multifamily comps — per-unit pricing, cap rate, and rent comparables — for the apartment portion. Apply the same underwriting standards you would for a standalone apartment asset.
  2. Value the commercial component independently. Use retail or office comps appropriate for the space type, lease terms, and tenant credit. A Starbucks on a 10-year NNN lease is worth something different than a local restaurant on a 3-year gross lease.
  3. Apply a blending discount of 5–10%. This accounts for the narrower buyer pool, the management complexity, and the financing constraints. The discount is larger when the commercial component is vacant, when leases are short-term, or when the uses create operational conflicts (noise, parking, hours of operation).
  4. Stress-test the commercial vacancy scenario. What's the asset worth if the ground-floor retail goes entirely vacant? If the answer is less than your basis, you have a problem. The residential component needs to carry the deal on its own.

The financing challenge

Mixed-use financing is more complex than single-product lending. The options:

Our take

Mixed-use can be a great asset class for operators who understand both residential and commercial management. The key is underwriting honestly — don't comp the whole deal as multifamily, don't ignore the management complexity, and don't assume the commercial component will lease itself.

We've financed and advised on mixed-use transactions from $3M to $50M+. If you're buying, selling, or developing mixed-use, we'll build a component-level BOV and structure the capital to match.

Working on a mixed-use deal?

We'll build the BOV and structure the financing.

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