Family Office · Manager
Property Manager (Multi-Estate) Salary
Compensation benchmarks from 255 verified sources including industry surveys, published reports, and market intelligence.
National Compensation Range
P25
$100,000
25th percentile
P50
$150,000
Median
P75
$225,000
75th percentile
CANDIDATE MARKET
Tight
Scarcity: 7/10
EST. CANDIDATE POOL
40-90
Active candidates nationally
DEMAND TREND
Stable
10% year-over-year
RETENTION
4 yr avg tenure
12% annual turnover
Property Manager (Multi-Estate) Salary by City
Median (P50) adjusted for metro cost of labor.
Market Trends
Growing as UHNW families expand property portfolios; overlaps with household estate management
Also Known As
Multi-Estate Property Manager, Portfolio Property Manager (FO), Residential Property Manager (Multi-Site), Estate Portfolio Manager
What Does a Property Manager (Multi-Estate) Do?
The Property Manager (Multi-Estate) operates within single-family or multi-family offices, working directly with principals, family members, and co-investment partners. Professionals in this role typically bring 8 to 12 years of relevant experience. Classified at the Manager level, this position draws from a tight candidate market with an estimated pool of 40-90 qualified professionals, making targeted sourcing and competitive compensation critical for successful placements.
What Drives Property Manager (Multi-Estate) Compensation?
The median (P50) compensation for a Property Manager (Multi-Estate) is $150,000, with the 25th to 75th percentile range spanning $100,000 to $225,000. The 83% spread between P25 and P75 reflects significant pay variation driven by assets under management, family office structure (single vs. multi-family), investment strategy complexity, geographic market, and whether the office manages direct investments or outsources to external managers. Demand for this role is trending upward with 0.1% year-over-year growth, which is putting upward pressure on compensation at all levels.
Property Manager (Multi-Estate) Career Path
Professionals who move into Property Manager (Multi-Estate) roles most commonly come from institutional asset management, private banking, wealth management, accounting firms, or corporate finance. From this position, the typical trajectory leads toward chief investment officer roles, family office CEO positions, or founding their own advisory practice. The average tenure in this role is approximately 4 years, with an annual turnover rate of 12%.
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