Fix-and-flip investors certainly had challenges in 2025 — perhaps none more pressing than stubbornly high interest rates. The trickle-down effect made financing harder to come by, created higher acquisition costs and led to tighter profit margins.
The marketplace has seen stiff bidding competition from an influx of private equity groups, which continue to gobble up single-family homes to turn into rental properties. According to some of the industry’s leading sources on the economy of flipping homes, profits have deflated, with an average return on investment of 25% on a single investment — the slimmest ROI margin since the 2008 financial crisis. Then there’s the reality of rising material costs and labor shortages, directly attributed to the ever-shifting global tariffs.
What began as a pandemic-induced housing boom that caused flipping activity to skyrocket has cooled. But this is an industry that’s still best described as resilient and highly adaptable to changing market conditions. To put it plainly, investor sentiment among operators hasn’t been all doom and gloom.
The savviest fix-and-flippers see the current outlook and market conditions not as a threat, but as an opportunity for disciplined approaches to outwit and outlast the opportunist class of investors. And if the tea leaves are right, this will almost certainly be the blueprint for the rest of 2026. It might get called a market recalibration, but the smart money bet is an industry that will reward precision, cautious execution and a focus on meaningful improvements that boost real value.
A 2025 post-mortem
According to Kiavi, one of the leading fix-and-flip lenders, the past year has been one of decline for the industry, characterized by declining home prices, shaky investor sentiment, increasing renovation costs and economic anxiety.
The economic indicators that measure profitability bear this out, with the following statistics culled from Kiavi’s 2025 Fix-and-Flip Market Index, released in November:
- A survey measuring the sentiment of more than 400 home flippers revealed an index score of 56 in the third quarter, the third straight quarterly decline, but still above the cutline of 50 indicating an expanding market. Anything below that level is considered a contraction.
- Average expenses tied to renovations reached $80,000 — a record high. These costs currently account for 16% of the average sales price.
- The percentage of homes selling below their expected after-repair value climbed to 21%, a three-year high.
- In an about-face from pandemic-era lending, borrowers faced an average 9.8% interest rate, making financing more expensive and difficult to obtain.
- Private equity purchases accounted for nearly a third of property flips, almost doubling the total from the previous year.
Beware of the buyers
Fix-and-flip investors looking for better days ahead should pay careful attention to the sentiment and behavior of buyers. When the median age of first-time homebuyers has reached an all-time high of 40 years old, according to the National Association of Realtors, you know they’ve had ample time to think about what really matters. And even if that median age is lower, as the Mortgage Bankers Association has maintained, both groups show that the age of buyers is getting older.
As you might expect, homebuyers are much more discerning than ever before, emphasizing value and substance over cosmetic aesthetics. Interest in premium, quality and custom upgrades have given way to the practical, efficient and durable.
Today’s buyers care less about ornate finishes and elaborate staging. What matters most to their discerning eye are tasteful kitchen and bath renovations, open yard space, garage capacity and good old-fashioned curb appeal.
A divergent reckoning
It won’t be the least bit surprising to see a recalibration among fix-and-flip investors in the coming year. The headwinds of the past year haven’t exactly changed, which means success in the coming year will require higher selectivity and more operational efficiency than ever before. And that favors the experienced and professional class of residential real estate investors — the serious market players who already have the infrastructure, systems and operational guidance in place.
Conversely, the side-hustle opportunists who skated by the seat of their pants when profitability was rampant are in for a reckoning of sorts. In a marketplace where profitability margins have grown ever tighter, many of the inexperienced operators will be squeezed out, creating more opportunities for the advantaged investors who remain solvent.
While the realities of the fix-and-flip marketplace are sobering, and no one is predicting a significant uptick in activity, the mood remains surprisingly optimistic.
In LendingOne’s 2025 third-quarter fix-and-flip survey, the company’s CEO, Matthew Niesser, best summarized this sentiment by stating: “Our latest survey reveals a fix-and-flip market that is both resilient and realistic. The broader macroeconomic environment, with elevated interest rates, higher inflation and rising costs for materials and labor, has clearly ended the pandemic frenzy. However, the lack of housing inventory and the ongoing demand for updated homes have created a new landscape for experienced investors.”
Among the more notable findings in the report that reinforce this optimism include:
- Almost 90% of flippers expect to complete a project within the next year
- A decline is imminent, believe 22%, while 64% expect results like 2025
- Almost half say their typical profit margins are in a 20% to 29% range
Winning in 2026
A combination of factors will determine success in the new year for residential real estate investors, but the central theme will be discernment. To reduce risk and gain profitability this year, here’s some basic advice:
Pay attention to the numbers. Fix-and-flip projects should be scrutinized like never before, with accurate forecasting of prices and renovation budgets, using solid neighborhood comparable properties.
Seek desirable projects. Choose to fix up what the buyers want, typically influenced by the local housing market, price compared to the local average, balanced bed-bath ratios and neighborhood dynamics (aka location, location, location).
And have flawless execution of the construction phase. Spend the necessary time to develop an accurate budget and timeline, then stage frequent checkups. Manage your teams and use quality control measures to ensure everything is completed on time and on budget.
Author
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Matt Lavinder is the founder and president of New Again Houses, a real estate redevelopment and technology franchise specializing in the entrepreneurial acquisition, renovation and profitable resale of older homes — adding value through construction upgrades. Backed by a proven business model, proprietary analysis software and an exclusive $34 million lending relationship with Alta Capital, New Again Houses has grown to 61 locations throughout the U.S. Matt can be reached at matt@newagainhouses.com.
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