The Up Plex Mission

Elevating others by providing wealth-building, passive investment opportunities through real estate.

It’s a known fact that owning real estate can be one of the best passive investment vehicles for you. More specifically, apartment buildings and commercial real estate. However, it also comes with an incredible amount of complexities in trying to acquire such assets and we’ve found that to be the reason most beginner investors shy away from pursuing.

So we set out to make it more attainable for investors to invest in these incredible wealth-building assets with confidence. As a limited partner, you get to leverage our time, network, and decades of experience to create peace of mind with every investment you make with us. We do our best to mitigate as much risk as possible. So much so that we won’t offer an opportunity that we aren’t investing in ourselves.

The Up Plex Mission

Elevating others by providing wealth-building, passive investment opportunities through real estate.

It’s a known fact that owning real estate can be one of the best passive investment vehicles for you. More specifically, apartment buildings and commercial real estate. However, it also comes with an incredible amount of complexities in trying to acquire such assets and we’ve found that to be the reason most beginner investors shy away from pursuing.

So we set out to make it more attainable for investors to invest in these incredible wealth-building assets with confidence. As a limited partner, you get to leverage our time, network, and decades of experience to create peace of mind with every investment you make with us. We do our best to mitigate as much risk as possible. So much so that we won’t offer an opportunity that we aren’t investing in ourselves.

Chris Linger

Principal

Chris Linger holds an MBA and brings more than 27 years of military leadership and operational experience from his service in the U.S. Navy. He now leads real estate acquisition analysis, underwriting, and asset strategy full-time, with a focus on disciplined execution and long-term value creation. His experience in leadership and mentorship has helped many investors and professionals strengthen their decision-making and investment approach.

Maricela Soberanes

Principal

Maricela Soberanes has been investing in real estate since 2006, beginning by building her own rental portfolio in Austin, Texas before expanding into larger investment projects and business ownership. A Navy veteran, author, and healthcare professional, she combines practical experience with a strong commitment to education, helping others understand wealth-building through real estate, financial strategy, and ownership. Her work is rooted in service, discipline, and creating opportunities that impact families and communities.

Chris Linger

Principal

Chris Linger holds an MBA and brings more than 27 years of military leadership and operational experience from his service in the U.S. Navy. He now leads real estate acquisition analysis, underwriting, and asset strategy full-time, with a focus on disciplined execution and long-term value creation. His experience in leadership and mentorship has helped many investors and professionals strengthen their decision-making and investment approach.

Maricela Soberanes

Principal

Maricela Soberanes has been investing in real estate since 2006, beginning by building her own rental portfolio in Austin, Texas before expanding into larger investment projects and business ownership. A Navy veteran, author, and healthcare professional, she combines practical experience with a strong commitment to education, helping others understand wealth-building through real estate, financial strategy, and ownership. Her work is rooted in service, discipline, and creating opportunities that impact families and communities.

Our Success Formula

Underwriting & Negotiating

Detailed underwriting determines the amount of negotiating that can be done with a seller on price and terms. Our experience allows us to properly analyze an asset and mitigate as much risk as possible for our investors.

Contract Review / Due Diligence

We have established the best legal and due diligence teams for our syndications. This allows us to simultaneously expedite two incredibly time-consuming tasks that most beginning investors struggle with.

Closing & Reassessment

There is more to closing than just signing on the dotted line and handing over the keys. There is an equal amount of critical work that needs to be completed soon after to ensure the success of a syndication.

Enacting Business Plan / CapEx

We identify and prioritize the necessary projects and execute them based on funding and critical need. Simultaneously, our expert CapEx team gets to work by coordinating with asset and property managers to assist in stabilizing the property.

Stabilization / Refinance

This process usually takes just over 2 years (depending on the market) and involves everything from completing CapEx, to ensuring organic fair market rent growth, to managing tenant turnover, all while working to decrease expenses.

Sale/Disposition

When it comes time to sell, we prepare the property to show as cost-effectively as possible. Once sold, we ensure that we properly close out business transactions and 3 months after the sale, we deliver all sales proceeds (return of capital) to our investors.

Our Success Formula

Underwriting & Negotiating

Detailed underwriting determines the amount of negotiating that can be done with a seller on price and terms. Our experience allows us to properly analyze an asset and mitigate as much risk as possible for our investors.

Contract Review / Due Diligence

We have established the best legal and due diligence teams for our syndications. This allows us to simultaneously expedite two incredibly time-consuming tasks that most beginning investors struggle with.

Closing & Reassessment

There is more to closing than just signing on the dotted line and handing over the keys. There is an equal amount of critical work that needs to be completed soon after to ensure the success of a syndication.

Enacting Business Plan / CapEx

We identify and prioritize the necessary projects and execute them based on funding and critical need. Simultaneously, our expert CapEx team gets to work by coordinating with asset and property managers to assist in stabilizing the property.

Stabilization / Refinance

This process usually takes just over 2 years (depending on the market) and involves everything from completing CapEx, to ensuring organic fair market rent growth, to managing tenant turnover, all while working to decrease expenses.

Sale/Disposition

When it comes time to sell, we prepare the property to show as cost-effectively as possible. Once sold, we ensure that we properly close out business transactions and 3 months after the sale, we deliver all sales proceeds (return of capital) to our investors.

Check Out Our Latest Blog

What Are Estoppel Certificates and Why Do They Matter in Real Estate?

What Are Estoppel Certificates and Why Do They Matter in Real Estate?

May 05, 20266 min read

When buying a rental property, most investors focus on the big numbers: purchase price, rents, expenses, occupancy, and projected returns. But there is one document that can protect a buyer from expensive surprises after closing: the estoppel certificate.

An estoppel certificate is a written statement signed by a tenant confirming the key facts about their lease and rental relationship with the landlord.

In simple terms, it is the tenant saying:

“Yes, this is what I pay. Yes, this is my lease term. Yes, this is my deposit. And yes, this is the current status of my agreement with the landlord.”

For real estate investors, especially those buying multifamily, retail, office, self-storage, or other income-producing properties, estoppel certificates are an important part of due diligence.


What Is an Estoppel Certificate?

An estoppel certificate is a document used to verify the accuracy of lease information before a property is sold, refinanced, or evaluated by a lender.

The buyer, lender, or investor wants to make sure that the information provided by the seller matches what the tenant understands to be true.

For example, a seller may provide a rent roll showing that Unit 10 pays $1,250 per month and has a lease ending on December 31. But unless that information is verified, the buyer is relying only on the seller’s records.

An estoppel certificate allows the tenant to confirm or correct that information before the buyer closes on the property.


Why Estoppel Certificates Are Important

In real estate, income determines value.

This is especially true in commercial multifamily and other income-producing assets. The higher the verified income, the stronger the property value. The lower the actual income, the more risk the buyer may be taking on.

Estoppel certificates help protect buyers from hidden issues such as:

  • A tenant claiming they pay less rent than what appears on the rent roll.

  • A tenant saying they were promised free rent or a rent concession.

  • A tenant stating they prepaid rent months in advance.

  • A tenant claiming the landlord owes repairs, credits, or reimbursements.

  • A tenant saying their security deposit is higher than what the seller reported.

  • A tenant revealing a side agreement that was never disclosed.

Without estoppel certificates, a buyer may close on a property believing one set of facts, only to discover later that the tenants have a very different understanding.


What Information Is Usually Included?

An estoppel certificate usually includes important lease details such as:

  • Tenant name and unit number

  • Monthly rent amount

  • Lease start date and expiration date

  • Security deposit amount

  • Whether rent is current or past due

  • Whether any rent has been prepaid

  • Whether there are any concessions, discounts, or free rent agreements

  • Whether the landlord owes the tenant anything

  • Whether there are unresolved maintenance issues or disputes

  • Whether the tenant has any claims against the landlord

  • Whether there are any verbal agreements outside the written lease

The goal is to create a clear written record before ownership changes hands.


A Simple Example

Imagine you are buying a 20-unit apartment property.

The seller gives you a rent roll showing that all units are occupied and each tenant pays $1,200 per month.

On paper, the property looks strong.

But during due diligence, you collect estoppel certificates and discover:

  • One tenant only pays $1,000 because of a verbal agreement.

  • Another tenant prepaid three months of rent.

  • Another tenant says the seller promised a new AC unit.

  • Another tenant says their security deposit is $1,500, but the seller’s records show only $800.

Those differences matter.

They affect your cash flow, your closing credits, your repair budget, and your overall confidence in the deal.


Why Lenders and Buyers Request Estoppels

Lenders and buyers request estoppel certificates because they want independent confirmation from the tenants.

A lender wants to know that the rental income supporting the loan is real.

A buyer wants to know that they are not inheriting undisclosed liabilities.

Investors want to know that the property’s income and operations are being presented accurately.

In a real estate transaction, the estoppel certificate becomes a protection tool. It helps reduce uncertainty and provides another layer of verification.


Estoppels in Multifamily Investing

In multifamily acquisitions, estoppels are especially valuable because small differences across multiple units can add up quickly.

One inaccurate lease may not seem like a major issue. But if several tenants have undisclosed concessions, incorrect deposits, or side agreements, the buyer could inherit thousands of dollars in unexpected losses.

For example, if five tenants are each paying $150 less than the rent roll shows, that is $750 per month in missing income. Over a year, that is $9,000. At a 6% cap rate, that income difference could affect the property value by approximately $150,000.

That is why experienced operators verify the details before closing.


What Happens If a Tenant Refuses to Sign?

Sometimes tenants do not return estoppel certificates. This does not always mean something is wrong. Some tenants may not understand the document, may be busy, or may be hesitant to sign anything legal-looking.

However, a low response rate can create uncertainty.

Buyers may ask the seller to help collect the certificates, offer tenant communication, or provide additional representations in the purchase agreement.

In some transactions, the buyer may require a certain percentage of estoppels to be returned before moving forward.


Best Practices for Buyers

When reviewing estoppel certificates, compare them carefully against:

  • The rent roll

  • The lease agreements

  • The security deposit schedule

  • The delinquency report

  • The seller’s financial statements

  • The property management records

  • Any tenant ledger or payment history

Any mismatch should be investigated before closing.

The estoppel process is not just paperwork. It is a reality check.


Best Practices for Sellers

Sellers should prepare for estoppels early.

Clean records, accurate rent rolls, signed leases, and organized tenant ledgers help create buyer confidence.

If there are verbal agreements, concessions, or unresolved tenant issues, those should be disclosed early. Surprises late in the transaction can create distrust, renegotiation, or even cause the buyer to walk away.

Transparency protects the transaction.


Final Thoughts

An estoppel certificate may seem like a small document, but it can reveal major information.

For buyers, it protects against hidden lease issues, inaccurate rent rolls, undisclosed concessions, and tenant claims.

For sellers, it helps support the accuracy of the information being presented.

For lenders and investors, it provides confidence that the property income is real and verifiable.

In real estate, the numbers matter. But verified numbers matter even more.

An estoppel certificate helps answer one of the most important questions in any income-producing property acquisition:

Is the income we are buying truly the income we are getting?


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