Denver Market Overview
Denver remains one of the strongest real estate investment markets in the Mountain West. The city proper has a population of approximately 715,000, anchoring a metro area of roughly 2.9 million people. Population growth has moderated from the pandemic-era surge, but Denver continues to add residents at a pace above the national average. Driven by a diversified economy, quality of life, and a young, educated workforce.
Major Employers
Denver's economy is anchored by aerospace and defense (Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Ball Aerospace), healthcare (UCHealth, SCL Health, DaVita's headquarters), technology (Arrow Electronics, DISH Network, Charter Communications), energy (Chevron's regional hub, Ovintiv), financial services (Charles Schwab's new headquarters), and a large federal government presence including the Denver Federal Center in Lakewood. This diversification insulates the housing market from single-industry downturns.
Housing Market Conditions. Early 2026
After the rate-driven correction of 2022-2023 and the stabilization period through 2024-2025, Denver's market has settled into a more balanced state. Inventory remains below the historical average but has improved from the extreme lows of 2021-2022. The citywide median home price sits around $585,000, with significant variation by neighborhood. Days on market average 25-35 for properly priced homes, and multiple-offer situations have returned in desirable neighborhoods below $600,000.
For investors, this means opportunity. The frenzy pricing of 2021 is gone, realistic deal-making is possible, and rent growth continues to outpace many peer markets. The key is knowing which neighborhoods offer the best risk-adjusted returns. And that is what this guide covers.
Why Denver for Real Estate Investment
- Population growth: Denver metro continues to attract 20,000-30,000 new residents annually, sustaining housing demand
- Job diversity: No single industry dominates, reducing economic risk
- Landlord-friendly laws: Colorado is more balanced than coastal states on landlord-tenant regulations
- Infrastructure investment: RTD light rail expansion, I-70 reconstruction, National Western Center, and Colfax BRT all drive neighborhood-level appreciation
- Rent growth: Denver rents have grown approximately 4-6% annually over the past two years, outpacing inflation
- Quality of life: 300+ days of sunshine, outdoor recreation, cultural amenities. All factors that sustain long-term demand
Washington Park (Wash Park)
Best strategies:
Washington Park is one of Denver's most desirable neighborhoods and has been for over a century. Centered around the 165-acre Washington Park itself, the area features tree-lined streets, historic bungalows and Tudors, and direct access to the Cherry Creek Trail. Families, young professionals, and outdoor enthusiasts compete fiercely for homes here.
What Makes It Valuable
The park is the anchor. Washington Park draws runners, cyclists, and families year-round, and proximity to it drives a consistent premium. South Gaylord Street and Old South Pearl Street provide walkable shopping and dining. Schools like Steele Elementary and Lincoln Elementary are among Denver's most sought-after public options. The neighborhood sits between I-25 and Colorado Boulevard, providing easy highway access without the noise.
Investment Play
At $1.1M-$1.4M median, Wash Park is not for first-time investors. The play here is high-end renovation. Finding dated homes with good bones and updating them to the $1.5M-$2M+ range that the market supports. Homes south of Alameda Avenue and closest to the park command the highest prices. Rental returns as a percentage are modest (cap rates around 3-4%), but appreciation has historically been strong and consistent. For investors with capital, BRRRR works well here: buy a dated property, renovate to modern standards, refinance at the higher value, and rent at $2,500-$3,500/month for a single-family home.
Pros and Cons
- Strong, consistent appreciation
- High demand from affluent renters and buyers
- Excellent schools (Steele, Lincoln)
- Walkability and Cherry Creek Trail access
- Low vacancy rates
- High entry price limits buyer pool
- Very competitive acquisitions market
- Historic preservation rules in parts of the neighborhood restrict exterior changes
- Lower cap rates compared to affordable areas
Best For
Experienced investors with significant capital. Flippers targeting the luxury renovation market. Buy-and-hold investors focused on long-term appreciation over cash flow.
Best Pockets
South of Alameda Avenue, within 4-5 blocks of the park. The area between South Downing Street and South Marion Parkway closest to the park consistently sells at a premium. West Wash Park (west of Downing) tends to be slightly more affordable than East Wash Park while still commanding strong rents.
1-Year Outlook: Stable to modest appreciation (3-5%). Demand remains strong but pricing has reached a plateau where only well-renovated homes push new highs. Inventory is tight.
5-Year Outlook: Continued steady growth (4-6% annually). Wash Park is a blue-chip Denver neighborhood. It does not spike wildly, but it rarely loses value. Long-term hold confidence is high.
Park Hill
Best strategies:
Park Hill is one of Denver's most dynamic investment neighborhoods. Stretching from Colorado Boulevard east to Quebec Street, and from Colfax Avenue north to 52nd Avenue, it encompasses a wide range of housing stock, price points, and neighborhood character. The area is defined by its mature trees, brick bungalows, mid-century ranches, and a community in the middle of significant change.
Understanding the Sub-Areas
South Park Hill (Colfax to 23rd Avenue) is the more established and expensive section. Homes here are predominantly 1920s-1940s brick bungalows and Tudors on tree-lined streets, with median prices in the $650K-$750K range. South Park Hill is the part of the neighborhood most often compared to Congress Park or Hilltop. And it is priced accordingly.
North Park Hill (23rd Avenue to 52nd Avenue) is where the investment opportunity concentrates. Median prices range from $450K-$600K depending on the block. The housing stock is more varied. 1950s-1970s ranches mixed with older bungalows. This area has experienced significant gentrification over the past decade, and that trajectory continues. Properties that need cosmetic updates can be purchased well below the neighborhood's rising ceiling.
Investment Play
Park Hill's value proposition is the gap between current prices and the neighborhood's trajectory. A 1960s ranch in North Park Hill purchased for $480K-$550K and updated with a modern kitchen, new flooring, and bathroom renovations ($40K-$70K in work) can sell in the $600K-$700K range. Rental demand is strong throughout the neighborhood. Proximity to the Central Park/Stapleton development and its amenities (restaurants, Town Center, Eastbridge) pulls tenants who want more space than a condo at a lower price point. ADU (accessory dwelling unit) additions are increasingly viable here, as Denver's ADU-friendly regulations allow investors to add a second unit on larger lots, boosting rental income substantially.
Pros and Cons
- Below citywide median in North Park Hill
- Strong rental demand from Central Park spillover
- ADU potential on larger lots
- Active gentrification driving appreciation
- Diverse housing stock offers varied entry points
- Some blocks in North Park Hill still transitioning
- Older infrastructure (sewer lines, electrical) can add rehab costs
- School quality varies significantly by location
- Block-by-block analysis is essential. Quality changes fast
Best For
Value-add investors comfortable with moderate rehabs. First-time flippers with a realistic budget. Buy-and-hold investors who want to be in Denver proper without paying Wash Park or Hilltop prices. ADU-focused investors looking to maximize rental income per lot.
1-Year Outlook: Moderate appreciation (4-6%). North Park Hill continues to close the gap with South Park Hill. Demand from buyers priced out of Central Park is consistent.
5-Year Outlook: Strong growth potential (5-8% annually). As Central Park matures and commercial development along Colorado Boulevard continues, Park Hill benefits from the rising tide. North Park Hill has the most room to run.
Montbello
Best strategies:
Montbello is Denver's most affordable neighborhood for single-family homes, and that is exactly what makes it interesting for a certain kind of investor. Located in far northeast Denver between I-70 and 56th Avenue, Montbello was developed primarily in the 1970s and 1980s as a planned community. The housing stock is predominantly ranch-style homes on decent-sized lots (6,000-8,000 sq ft typical), built with straightforward floor plans that keep renovation costs predictable.
The Opportunity
At $350K-$420K, Montbello offers the lowest entry point within the City and County of Denver. A 3-bedroom, 2-bath ranch here rents for $1,800-$2,200/month, producing cap rates of 5-7%. Some of the best cash flow numbers you will find inside Denver city limits. The homes are simple to renovate: most need cosmetic work (paint, flooring, kitchen/bath updates) rather than structural intervention. A $15K-$30K cosmetic update can bring a tired 1970s ranch up to market-rate rental condition.
The broader story is the Green Valley Ranch and Gateway corridor immediately to the east. As newer development pushes west from DIA, Montbello catches spillover demand. The RTD A Line (University of Colorado A Line) provides commuter rail access to DIA and downtown, with the 40th/Airport and Peoria stations serving the eastern edge of the area.
Pros and Cons
- Lowest entry price in Denver proper
- Best cash flow / cap rates in the city
- Predictable renovation costs (1970s-80s ranches)
- Large lots by Denver standards
- Green Valley Ranch growth corridor to the east
- RTD A Line access for DIA commuters
- Higher crime rates in some pockets
- Fewer retail and dining amenities
- Lower school ratings
- Car-dependent. Low walkability
- Appreciation has historically lagged other Denver neighborhoods
Best For
Cash flow-focused investors. Buy-and-hold investors building a rental portfolio. First-time investors who want to enter the Denver market at a manageable price point. Section 8 investors. Montbello has consistent demand from voucher holders, and rents typically fall within payment standards.
Best Pockets
The southern portion of Montbello (closer to I-70 and the Green Valley Ranch border) tends to have newer homes and better proximity to commercial amenities. The blocks around Montbello Central Park and the Montbello Recreation Center are community anchors. Avoid the most isolated northern blocks unless pricing is significantly below area median.
1-Year Outlook: Stable pricing with modest rent growth (2-4%). Montbello is not a rapid appreciation play. It is a cash flow play. Prices should hold steady.
5-Year Outlook: Moderate appreciation (3-5% annually). As Denver's affordable neighborhoods continue to shrink, Montbello benefits from being one of the last sub-$400K options. Infrastructure improvements and Green Valley Ranch growth provide a long-term tailwind.
Westwood / West Colfax
Best strategies:
Westwood and West Colfax represent two of Denver's most compelling speculative investment areas. Sitting west of Federal Boulevard and south of Colfax Avenue (Westwood) and north of Colfax along the W Line corridor (West Colfax), these neighborhoods combine below-average pricing with genuine catalysts for growth.
The Catalysts
The biggest driver is the Colfax Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project, which will transform West Colfax Avenue with dedicated bus lanes, modern stations, and faster transit service connecting the west side to downtown and Aurora. Major infrastructure investment like this has historically driven significant property value increases in Denver. The W Line light rail did the same thing when it opened.
Sloan's Lake, just to the north of West Colfax, has already transformed from a working-class area into a $700K-$1M+ neighborhood. That appreciation pressure is pushing south into West Colfax and Westwood. The cultural vibrancy of the Morrison Road corridor in Westwood. One of Denver's most authentic Latino cultural districts. Is gaining recognition and investment.
Investment Play
The strategy here is positioning ahead of the curve. Properties in Westwood can still be acquired in the $400K-$475K range. Well below the citywide median. A cosmetic rehab ($25K-$45K) positions these homes for either resale in the $500K-$575K range or strong rental returns at $1,900-$2,400/month. Small multi-family properties (duplexes, triplexes) are available in West Colfax and can generate excellent cash-on-cash returns. The W Line light rail stations at Knox, Perry, and Sheridan provide transit access that tenants value.
Pros and Cons
- Below citywide median pricing
- Colfax BRT will drive future appreciation
- Proximity to Sloan's Lake price spillover
- W Line light rail access (West Colfax)
- Small multi-family opportunities
- Strong cultural identity attracting new businesses
- Still developing. Amenity gaps exist
- Deferred maintenance in older housing stock
- Higher crime than Denver average in some blocks
- School quality below average
- BRT timeline subject to delays
Best For
Investors with a 3-5 year horizon willing to buy before the infrastructure premium is fully priced in. Multi-family investors. BRRRR investors who want to lock in below-market pricing and benefit from transit-driven appreciation. Investors comfortable with transitioning neighborhoods.
1-Year Outlook: Steady appreciation (3-5%). The BRT project is not yet complete, so the full infrastructure premium has not materialized. Current pricing reflects potential, not completion.
5-Year Outlook: Strong appreciation potential (6-10% annually). When the Colfax BRT launches and Sloan's Lake price pressure continues south, Westwood and West Colfax are positioned for the kind of neighborhood-level transformation that created value in RiNo and LoHi a decade ago.
Capitol Hill / Uptown
Best strategies:
Capitol Hill is Denver's densest and most urban neighborhood. Stretching from Broadway east to York Street, and from Colfax Avenue south to 6th Avenue, it packs Victorian mansions (many converted to apartments), mid-rise condos, walk-up apartment buildings, and a handful of remaining single-family homes into one of the most walkable areas in the entire state. Uptown (also called North Capitol Hill) extends north of Colfax to 20th Avenue and adds more of the same urban character with slightly more modern construction.
Why Investors Pay Attention
Capitol Hill has the highest rental demand in Denver. Vacancy rates consistently run 2-4%. Well below the metro average of 5-7%. The tenant pool is deep: young professionals, service industry workers, students, and anyone who prioritizes walkability over square footage. A walk score of 93 makes it one of the most walkable neighborhoods between Chicago and the West Coast. Restaurants, bars, grocery stores, coffee shops, and Cheesman Park are all accessible on foot.
Investment Play
Single-family homes are rare and expensive here. The real play is condos and small multi-family. A dated 2-bedroom condo purchased for $350K-$425K and updated with $15K-$25K in cosmetic work (new kitchen counters, updated bath, modern fixtures, fresh paint) can resell for $400K-$500K or rent for $1,800-$2,300/month. The cap rates on condos are modest after HOA fees (typically $250-$450/month), but appreciation and low vacancy make the total return competitive.
The real prize in Cap Hill is a 2-4 unit building. These are scattered throughout the neighborhood, often in converted Victorian homes. A well-located duplex or fourplex can generate $5,000-$10,000/month in gross rent. They are rare, they trade at a premium, and they are worth every dollar for investors who can find them.
Important Considerations
- Denver STR regulations: Short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO) are allowed in Denver only in the owner's primary residence. This rules out Airbnb as an investment strategy unless you plan to house hack and rent spare rooms.
- HOA fees: Condo HOA fees in Cap Hill range from $200/month to $500+/month. Always factor these into your cash flow analysis. Some older buildings have special assessments pending.
- Parking: Street parking is a challenge. Units with a dedicated parking space command a $50-$100/month rent premium and sell for $15K-$25K more.
Pros and Cons
- Highest rental demand in Denver (2-4% vacancy)
- Walk score 93. Tenants pay a premium for walkability
- Deep tenant pool across demographics
- Multi-family buildings generate strong gross rents
- Proximity to downtown, Cheesman Park, restaurants
- HOA fees reduce condo cash flow
- Denver STR regulations limit Airbnb strategy
- Parking scarcity and cost
- Higher property crime (car break-ins, package theft)
- Older buildings may have deferred maintenance
Best For
Investors focused on urban rentals with minimal vacancy. House hackers who want to live in a walkable neighborhood and rent out rooms or units. Multi-family investors hunting for 2-4 unit buildings. Condo flippers comfortable with the HOA cost structure.
1-Year Outlook: Stable pricing with continued strong rental demand. Condo prices may see 2-4% appreciation. Rents continue to climb 3-5% annually as downtown employment grows.
5-Year Outlook: Steady appreciation (3-5% annually). Capitol Hill is a mature neighborhood. It will not double in value, but it will not crash either. The long-term play is consistent cash flow from rentals in an area where demand never goes away.
Globeville / Elyria-Swansea
Best strategies:
Globeville and Elyria-Swansea are Denver's highest-risk, highest-potential-reward investment neighborhoods. These small communities sit immediately north of downtown, bracketed by I-70 to the south, I-25 to the west, and the South Platte River. For most of their history, they were working-class industrial neighborhoods. Home to smelters, railyards, and meatpacking plants. That industrial legacy left environmental scars, but it also left some of the cheapest land within two miles of downtown Denver.
The Billion-Dollar Catalyst
The National Western Center is a $1.1 billion redevelopment project transforming the historic National Western Stock Show complex into a year-round campus for events, agriculture, education, and community gathering. Colorado State University is building a permanent presence. The project includes new parks, pedestrian bridges, and transit connections. This is not speculative. It is funded, under construction, and scheduled to be substantially complete by 2028.
Add to that the I-70 reconstruction, which lowered a stretch of the aging highway below grade through Elyria-Swansea, replacing the old viaduct with a 4-acre park cap over the highway. This single project removed the biggest quality-of-life complaint (elevated highway noise and pollution) and reconnected the neighborhood to the rest of north Denver.
Investment Play
This is a 5-10 year play. Investors buying in Globeville/Elyria-Swansea today are betting that $1B+ in public investment will transform property values the way the RiNo Art District transformed five blocks to the west. The math is compelling: land within two miles of a major American downtown, priced at $350K-$450K for a single-family home, with billions in public infrastructure pouring in. But the timeline is uncertain, and the environmental history means due diligence is non-negotiable.
Critical Due Diligence
- Superfund proximity: The Vasquez Boulevard/I-70 Superfund site overlaps parts of these neighborhoods. Check EPA records for any specific property. Remediation has been ongoing, but some parcels have deed restrictions or require environmental assessments.
- Soil contamination: Former industrial use means soil testing should be part of any acquisition. Lead and arsenic contamination have been documented in some areas.
- Flood risk: Proximity to the South Platte River means some properties are in or near FEMA flood zones. Check flood maps carefully.
Pros and Cons
- Cheapest land near downtown Denver
- $1.1B National Western Center development
- I-70 reconstruction removes highway barrier
- RTD N Line commuter rail station (National Western Center)
- Massive upside if the area transforms like RiNo
- Environmental contamination history (Superfund)
- Long timeline to full transformation (5-10 years)
- Higher crime currently
- Limited retail and amenities today
- Displacement pressure on existing community
Best For
Patient investors with a long-term horizon and strong risk tolerance. Land speculators. Buy-and-hold investors who can rent the property profitably while waiting for appreciation. Not for first-time investors or anyone who needs a quick return.
1-Year Outlook: Flat to modest appreciation (2-4%). The National Western Center is still under construction and the full neighborhood transformation has not materialized yet. Pricing reflects future potential at a discount.
5-Year Outlook: High potential appreciation (8-15%+ annually if catalysts deliver). If the National Western Center opens as planned and the neighborhood develops commercial amenities, early investors could see significant returns. This is the highest-variance bet on this list.
Green Valley Ranch / Gateway
Best strategies:
Green Valley Ranch and the adjacent Gateway neighborhood represent a different kind of Denver investment. These are not historic neighborhoods with character homes and tree-lined streets. They are 2000s-era planned communities on the far east side of Denver, closer to DIA than to downtown. And for buy-and-hold investors, that is exactly the point.
What Makes It Work
Homes in GVR and Gateway were built in the 2000s and 2010s, which means newer roofs, modern plumbing and electrical, energy-efficient windows, and open floor plans that tenants prefer. A 3-bedroom, 2-bath home here requires minimal rehabilitation. Often just paint, carpet, and minor cosmetic updates. Total turn cost is typically $5K-$15K, compared to $30K-$60K for a comparable home in an older neighborhood.
The tenant base is strong: DIA employees (the airport is Denver's largest employer with over 35,000 workers), young families priced out of central Denver, and military-connected renters from nearby Buckley Space Force Base. Rental demand is consistent and vacancy rates run 3-5%.
Investment Play
This is a straightforward cash flow play. Buy a 3-bedroom home for $420K-$480K, spend $5K-$15K on turnover cosmetics, and rent for $2,000-$2,500/month. Cap rates run 4-6%. The homes are easy to manage (newer construction = fewer maintenance calls), easy to rent (strong tenant demand), and easy to exit (first-time homebuyers are the primary resale market). HOA fees in some sections run $30-$80/month. Manageable but factor them in.
Pros and Cons
- Newer construction = lower maintenance and rehab costs
- Strong rental demand from DIA and Buckley workers
- Decent schools compared to other affordable Denver neighborhoods
- Growing commercial development (restaurants, retail)
- RTD A Line provides commuter rail to downtown and DIA
- Far from downtown Denver (30-40 minute drive)
- Suburban feel. Lacks the character of older neighborhoods
- HOA restrictions in many subdivisions
- Low walkability. Car dependent
- Appreciation has been slower than central Denver neighborhoods
Best For
Buy-and-hold investors who prioritize low maintenance and consistent cash flow over appreciation. Out-of-state investors who want a simple, manageable Denver rental. First-time investors who want a newer home with predictable costs. Portfolio builders adding turnkey properties.
1-Year Outlook: Stable prices with steady rent growth (3-5%). GVR does not spike or crash. It moves with the broader Denver market at a slight lag.
5-Year Outlook: Moderate, steady appreciation (3-5% annually). As DIA continues to grow (the airport has expansion projects underway) and commercial development fills in, GVR slowly closes the gap with more established neighborhoods. This is a reliable, boring investment. And that is a compliment.
Ruby Hill / Overland
Best strategies:
Ruby Hill and Overland are two of Denver's most undervalued neighborhoods relative to their neighbors. Sandwiched between the rapidly appreciating Platt Park to the east, the established Baker neighborhood to the north, and the South Broadway corridor running through the middle, these neighborhoods offer mid-range pricing with premium-neighborhood proximity.
The Value Gap
Consider the math: Platt Park (immediately east across Broadway) has a median home price around $750K-$900K. Wash Park (a mile further east) runs $1.1M-$1.4M. Ruby Hill and Overland sit at $500K-$650K. A significant discount for neighborhoods that share many of the same amenities. South Broadway (S. Broadway between Alameda and Evans) is one of Denver's most vibrant restaurant and entertainment corridors, and it runs directly through the area. Ruby Hill Park itself is a 90-acre park with a sledding hill, off-leash dog area, and views of the Front Range.
Investment Play
The play is capturing the value gap. A 1950s-1960s ranch or brick bungalow purchased for $500K-$575K, updated with a modern kitchen, refinished hardwood floors, updated bathrooms, and fresh landscaping ($35K-$55K in work), can resell for $625K-$750K in this market. The buyer pool is couples and young families who want to be near Platt Park and South Broadway but cannot afford Platt Park or Wash Park pricing.
ADU potential is strong here. Many Ruby Hill lots are 6,000+ square feet with alley access. Ideal for a detached ADU under Denver's current regulations. Adding a 500-700 sq ft ADU can generate $1,200-$1,500/month in additional rent, dramatically improving the overall return on the property.
Pros and Cons
- Undervalued relative to Platt Park and Wash Park
- South Broadway corridor amenities
- Ruby Hill Park (90 acres, mountain views)
- ADU-friendly lot sizes with alley access
- Strong buyer demand from Platt Park/Wash Park spillover
- Some lots are smaller than average, limiting renovation scope
- Limited commercial options away from Broadway
- Overland can get noise from I-25 on eastern edge
- Not as walkable as Platt Park or Wash Park
Best For
Flippers who understand the "buy the cheapest house in the best area" principle. ADU investors who want to maximize rental income per lot. BRRRR investors who want to be in south Denver at a below-market entry point. Investors who understand that proximity to premium neighborhoods drives appreciation.
1-Year Outlook: Solid appreciation (4-6%). Ruby Hill and Overland are being discovered by buyers priced out of Platt Park, and each comparable sale at a new high pulls the neighborhood forward.
5-Year Outlook: Strong appreciation potential (5-8% annually). As the price gap with Platt Park narrows, Ruby Hill and Overland are positioned for the kind of steady catch-up growth that rewards early investors. The South Broadway corridor continues to add restaurants and retail, increasing the neighborhood's desirability.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Use this table to quickly compare all eight neighborhoods across the metrics that matter most for investment decisions.
| Neighborhood | Median Price | SFH Rent | Best Strategy | Risk Level | 5-Year Outlook |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wash Park | $1.1M - $1.4M | $2,500 - $3,500 | High-end flips, BRRRR | Low | 4-6%/yr |
| Park Hill | $550K - $750K | $2,000 - $2,800 | Value-add flips, ADUs | Low-Medium | 5-8%/yr |
| Montbello | $350K - $420K | $1,800 - $2,200 | Buy-and-hold, Section 8 | Medium | 3-5%/yr |
| Westwood / W. Colfax | $400K - $500K | $1,900 - $2,400 | BRRRR, multi-family | Medium | 6-10%/yr |
| Capitol Hill | $350K - $600K | $1,400 - $1,800 (1BR) | Condo flips, multi-family | Low | 3-5%/yr |
| Globeville / E-S | $350K - $450K | $1,700 - $2,100 | Speculative, land banking | High | 8-15%/yr* |
| Green Valley Ranch | $420K - $500K | $2,000 - $2,500 | Turnkey rentals | Low | 3-5%/yr |
| Ruby Hill / Overland | $500K - $650K | $2,200 - $2,800 | Cosmetic flips, ADUs | Low-Medium | 5-8%/yr |
*Globeville/Elyria-Swansea appreciation is contingent on National Western Center development delivering on schedule. Higher variance than other estimates.
How to Get Started
Knowing the neighborhoods is step one. Executing on that knowledge. Finding off-market deals, analyzing them correctly, and closing profitably. Is where the real work happens. Here is how to move from research to action.
For Investors Ready to Buy
EZ Investments sources off-market properties across all of these Denver neighborhoods. We analyze every deal before it reaches our buyers list. Comps, repair estimates, ARV projections, and profit potential. When a property matches your criteria, we send it directly to you with all the data you need to make a decision.
- Join our buyers list. Tell us your preferred neighborhoods, price range, property types, and investment strategy. We match deals to your profile.
- Get disclosed. Sign our confidentiality agreement (takes 2 minutes via PandaDoc) and start receiving deal details immediately.
- Move fast. Off-market deals do not last. Our best buyers respond within 24-48 hours and close within 2-3 weeks.
For New Investors
If you are new to real estate investing, start with our guide to evaluating investment properties and our BRRRR strategy guide. Both are free, comprehensive, and written specifically for the Colorado market.
Questions?
Call us at (303) 616-5871. We respond to every call and are happy to talk through which neighborhoods make sense for your specific situation and budget.