Buyer's Guide

Know what you're buying
before you buy it.

Asset type isn't a technicality: it determines what you actually own, what you owe every month, how much control you have over your own property, and how the math works if you ever want to rent, expand, or sell. Before you fall in love with a listing, know which category you're dealing with.

The Five Types

Residential Asset Classes, Explained

Five structures. Very different ownership realities. Here's what each one actually means for your money, your obligations, and your options.

Co-op
What you own: Shares in a corporation, not the unit itself
HOA: Always

You buy shares in a corporation that owns the building. Your shares entitle you to a proprietary lease on your unit. Common in Washington DC; rare elsewhere in the DMV. Financing is different from a standard mortgage: most lenders offer co-op loans rather than traditional mortgages, and not all lenders offer them at all.

Benefits
  • Often lower purchase price than comparable condos
  • Monthly maintenance covers building mortgage, taxes, and upkeep
  • Strong community oversight keeps building well-maintained
Drawbacks
  • Board approval required to buy AND to sublet
  • Subletting often heavily restricted or prohibited
  • Fewer lender options
  • Smaller buyer pool due to financing and board requirements
  • You own shares, not real property
Investor angle: Co-ops are not investor-friendly. Rental restrictions are common and board approval can block non-owner-occupants. Buy here to live, not to rent.
Condo
What you own: Interior of your unit + undivided share of common areas
HOA: Always

You own the interior of your unit and a share of common areas. Standard conventional or FHA loans available, but the condo project must be on an approved list for FHA/VA financing.

Benefits
  • Lower maintenance, exterior handled by the association
  • Access to amenities at a fraction of private ownership cost
  • Often the most affordable entry point into a desirable location
  • Rental allowed in most communities (check bylaws for caps)
Drawbacks
  • Condo fees are ongoing and tend to increase
  • Special assessments can hit suddenly for big repairs
  • Less control over building decisions
  • Rental caps in some buildings limit flexibility
  • FHA/VA financing requires project approval
Investor angle: Can work as a long-term rental if the building allows it and HOA fees don't kill cash flow. Check rental cap and monthly condo fee carefully before underwriting.
Townhouse / Rowhome
What you own: The structure + typically a small yard or patio
HOA: Sometimes

Multi-story attached home sharing walls with neighbors. In older DC neighborhoods and Arlington County, many rowhomes have no HOA at all. In newer planned communities, HOA handles common areas and exterior maintenance.

Benefits
  • More space than a condo, often lower price than detached SFH
  • Outdoor space
  • No HOA in many older urban communities
  • Strong rental demand throughout the DMV
Drawbacks
  • Shared walls, noise can be a factor
  • In HOA communities: fees, rules, limited exterior flexibility
  • Less privacy than a detached home
  • ADU potential usually limited by layout and lot size
Investor angle: Good value-add candidates, especially older rowhomes in DC and Arlington County with no HOA. House hacking a townhouse by renting rooms is common and effective. ADU less typical but not impossible.
Single Family Home
What you own: The structure, the lot, everything
HOA: Sometimes

A detached structure on its own lot. Maximum ownership, maximum control. No shared walls, no mandatory HOA in most cases. In the right jurisdictions, you can add an accessory dwelling unit for additional rental income.

Benefits
  • Maximum flexibility: renovate, expand, add ADU, rent rooms, or sell
  • Full privacy
  • Strongest appreciation history in high-demand markets like Arlington County
  • ADU potential in many DMV jurisdictions
  • No HOA in many neighborhoods
Drawbacks
  • Higher price point, especially in Northern Virginia and DC
  • You handle all maintenance, no association to cover the roof
  • Some neighborhoods have HOAs with strict exterior rules
Investor angle: Best house hacking vehicle and most ADU-friendly asset type. Also the cleanest exit, widest buyer pool when you eventually sell. The gold standard for building long-term equity in the DMV.
Small Multifamily (2–4 units)
What you own: The entire building and the land
HOA: Rarely

A duplex, triplex, or quadplex. One building, multiple income streams, one mortgage. If you live in one unit, you qualify for residential financing, FHA (3.5% down) or conventional (5% down). Anything above 4 units flips to commercial financing.

Benefits
  • Multiple income streams from one mortgage
  • Owner-occupant financing available (lower down payment, lower rate)
  • Other units generate income from day one
  • If one unit is vacant, others keep cash flowing
  • Scales without another loan
Drawbacks
  • Hard to find in core Northern Virginia, more common in Maryland and WV
  • Tenant management is more complex
  • Lender may require 6 months reserves
  • Higher acquisition cost than condos or townhouses
Investor angle: The most powerful vehicle for building wealth while living in your investment. A duplex in Prince George's County or a triplex in Baltimore can put you on the path to living rent-free. This is where the math gets exciting.

Quick Reference

Side-by-Side Comparison

How the five asset classes stack up across the metrics that actually matter for buyers and investors in the DMV.

Asset Type What You Own HOA? FHA/VA Eligible Can Rent Out ADU Potential Best For
Co-op Shares in a corp Always Rarely Board approval required No Primary residence only
Condo Interior unit Always If project approved Check bylaws / caps No Primary, some LTR
Townhouse Structure + lot Sometimes Yes Usually yes Limited Primary, house hack, LTR
Single Family Structure + lot Sometimes Yes Yes High, check zoning Primary, house hack, all strategies
Small Multifamily Entire building + lot Rarely Yes (2–4, owner-occ) Yes, all other units Possible House hack, BRRRR, max cash flow
Next Step

Not sure which asset type fits
your goals?

Asset class is just one variable. Strategy, market, financing, and your own timeline all factor in. Let's figure out which combination actually makes sense for where you are and where you're trying to go.