When I left institutional acquisitions and started talking to family offices actively building CRE portfolios, the first thing that struck me wasn't the sophistication of their investment theses — those were often sharper than what I'd seen at larger funds. It was the gap between investment quality and operational infrastructure. A family office managing a $400M CRE portfolio with a two-person deal team running acquisition underwriting in a shared Excel workbook and asset management out of a folder structure on Dropbox. The analysis was good. The tooling was not.
That gap has been narrowing since 2022, partly because purpose-built CRE tools have dropped in cost and implementation complexity, and partly because LP expectations around reporting quality have pushed family office GPs to professionalize their data infrastructure. We've spent the past year surveying what family office deal teams are actually using — and the picture is more varied than the software vendors' marketing suggests.
The Baseline Stack Most Family Offices Still Use
Before talking about what progressive family offices are adopting, it's worth describing the baseline — because the baseline is still where the majority of sub-$500M AUM family office CRE programs operate:
- Underwriting: Custom Excel models, usually a firm-specific template developed by a senior analyst years ago and maintained inconsistently across deal team turnover
- Comps research: CoStar for data, supplemented by broker relationship calls and internally curated comparable deal files
- Property management data: Yardi or AppFolio at the property level, with monthly exports to Excel for portfolio aggregation
- LP reporting: Quarterly PDF packets assembled manually from property reports and Excel models
- Pipeline management: CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot, or a shared spreadsheet) tracking deal status from broker contact to LOI to close
- Document management: Dropbox or SharePoint folder structure, often with inconsistent naming conventions that make finding prior deal analysis time-consuming
This stack isn't broken. It produces adequate underwriting and sufficient reporting for most LP relationships. What it doesn't do well is scale — and for family office programs growing from 10 assets to 30-50 assets over a 5-year period, the manual coordination overhead of this baseline stack becomes a meaningful constraint on deal velocity and asset management quality.
Where Progressive Family Offices Are Investing
The family offices we've seen investing in tech stack upgrades are doing so in three areas, roughly in order of adoption frequency:
Portfolio monitoring and asset management dashboards. This is the most common upgrade investment we see. Tools like Juniper Square, EquiAlt, and purpose-built Airtable or Notion deployments give deal teams a real-time view of portfolio occupancy, NOI vs. underwriting, and lease expiry concentration. The driver is usually an LP event — a capital call question, a co-investment conversation, or a fund formation process where prospective LPs ask to see how the GP monitors portfolio performance between quarterly reports.
Underwriting intelligence tools. The second category is acquisition-stage tools that improve the speed and defensibility of deal underwriting. This includes comps database access beyond standard CoStar (CoStar remains the dominant source for most family offices but is supplemented with broker-specific comps databases in specialized asset classes), as well as AI-assisted rent roll normalization and NOI structuring tools that reduce the manual assembly time in the early diligence phase. Family offices that run 20-50 acquisition screens per year are the most active adopters here — the time savings compound meaningfully at that deal volume.
LP portal and investor reporting automation. The third area is automating the quarterly reporting workflow. Family offices with 20+ LP relationships — particularly those with institutional LPs such as foundations, endowments, or family aggregators — face enough reporting pressure to justify the investment in a structured LP portal rather than PDF-based quarterly packets. Adoption here is lower than the other two categories but growing.
The Tool Selection Problem
The challenge for family office CRE programs evaluating new tools is that the market is fragmented between enterprise platforms built for institutional-scale funds and lightweight point solutions that don't integrate with each other. Neither end of that spectrum fits well.
Enterprise real estate platforms — Argus, MRI, Yardi Investment Management — are built for institutional workflows with institutional pricing. A two-person family office deal team doesn't need full Argus enterprise deployment; they need defensible DCF modeling and submarket comps, not a full asset lifecycle management platform with 6-month implementation timelines.
On the other end, lightweight point solutions proliferated between 2020 and 2023 — tools addressing single pain points like deal pipeline tracking or LP reporting separately. The problem with point solutions is integration. A deal pipeline tool that doesn't connect to the underwriting model, which doesn't connect to the property management data, requires manual data movement at every handoff. Manual data movement is where errors get introduced. It's also where staff time goes.
The evaluation criteria that matter most for family office tech stack decisions:
| Criteria | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Integration with existing Yardi / AppFolio data | Avoids manual data re-entry from property management to portfolio tools |
| Implementation time under 30 days | 2-person deal teams can't sustain multi-month onboarding projects |
| Excel export / compatibility | IC and LP review still happens in Excel; tools that don't export cleanly create workflow friction |
| No per-seat pricing that penalizes growth | Family offices adding deal team headcount shouldn't face large tool cost jumps |
| Data ownership and portability | Vendor lock-in risk is real for proprietary deal analysis and tenant credit data |
What's Still Missing from the Family Office Tool Market
Despite the growth in CRE tech offerings, we consistently hear from family office deal teams about gaps that existing tools don't address well:
Tenant credit intelligence at the mid-market level is the most frequently cited gap. Institutional funds have access to Bloomberg terminal data, D&B enterprise API feeds, and analyst coverage for their major tenants. Family offices underwriting a 20-tenant office building don't have the same access at the same cost. The choice is often between expensive institutional data subscriptions and no structured credit analysis — neither of which fits a two-person team underwriting 30 deals per year.
Cross-market submarket intelligence for non-institutional-coverage submarkets is another gap. CoStar coverage is excellent for primary markets. In secondary and tertiary market acquisition programs — which represent a significant portion of family office CRE activity — submarket data quality and coverage drops considerably. Deal teams supplementing with broker calls and local market research are operating on lower confidence assumptions than their models suggest.
The good news is that the market is converging toward tools that address these gaps at mid-market price points. The question for family office deal teams is knowing which gaps are limiting their deal quality most acutely, and sequencing tool investments accordingly rather than trying to upgrade the entire stack simultaneously. In our experience, the biggest single-point leverage is usually in the acquisition underwriting stage — because underwriting quality determines what assets go into the portfolio, and portfolio quality determines everything downstream.
Our View on Where the Market Is Heading
Family office CRE deal teams in 2025 are at an inflection point: the cost and complexity of purpose-built tools has dropped below the threshold where a two-person deal team can justify the implementation investment, but the fragmentation between point solutions and enterprise platforms still creates real integration friction. The programs that build durable competitive advantages over the next five years will be the ones that invest in the data infrastructure layer — standardized underwriting, automated normalization, consistent LP reporting — rather than individual point solutions that don't talk to each other.
That's a judgment I formed in institutional acquisitions and it's been confirmed by every family office conversation I've had since. The analysts at well-resourced family offices are not less skilled than their institutional counterparts. They have less infrastructure supporting their judgment. Closing that gap is what the right tech stack does.