TL;DR

Property managers spend the majority of their week on administrative tasks that don’t require showing properties, signing leases, or managing owner relationships. Tenant screening, lease document preparation, maintenance coordination, vendor management, owner communication, and accounting support are all repeatable, process-driven tasks a trained VA handles at $1,200/month vs $3,000–$4,500 for a U.S. admin. Pavago has placed VAs for both property management companies and individual landlords. The VA handles A-to-Z PM admin across all major PM software platforms. This guide covers the full task scope, the PM tools they need to know, and how to hire one that’s productive by week 3. Book A Call with Pavago

The Admin Burden Property Managers Don’t Talk About

Property management is sold as a relationship business. And it is. The problem is that the relationship work (owner communication, tenant relations, property showings, lease negotiations) gets crushed under the weight of admin work that could be done by anyone with a laptop and training.

A typical property manager handling 50–150 units spends their week processing applications, coordinating maintenance requests, scheduling vendor visits, preparing lease documents, sending owner statements, following up on rent collections, and managing move-in/move-out inspections. According to the National Association of Residential Property Managers (NARPM), the top operational challenge for property management companies is staffing and operational efficiency. (external, dofollow, new tab) Translation: they can’t find enough people to do the admin work, and the people they do find cost too much relative to management fee revenue.

A $1,200/month VA handling 15–25 hours of admin per week changes the math entirely. The property manager focuses on relationships and growth. The VA handles everything that doesn’t require being physically present at a property.

What a Property Management VA Actually Handles

Pavago places VAs for both property management companies and individual landlords who handle the full A-to-Z admin scope:

TaskWhat It Involves In DetailHours Saved/WeekPM Software Used
Tenant screeningProcess rental applications through screening services. Pull credit reports, criminal background checks, eviction history, and income verification. Compile screening summaries for manager review. Contact previous landlords and employers for references.3–5 hoursAppFolio, Buildium, Rent Manager, TransUnion SmartMove, RentPrep
Lease administrationPrepare lease agreements from templates. Process lease renewals. Handle lease amendments and addenda. Manage security deposit documentation. Process move-in and move-out paperwork. Track lease expirations 60–90 days out.3–5 hoursAppFolio, Buildium, Rent Manager, Yardi, DocuSign
Maintenance coordinationReceive maintenance requests from tenants (phone, email, portal). Create work orders in PM software. Dispatch vendors and contractors. Follow up on completion. Schedule preventive maintenance. Track open work orders and escalate overdue items.4–6 hoursAppFolio, Buildium, Rent Manager, and property maintenance portals
Vendor managementMaintain vendor database with contact info, insurance certificates, and W-9s. Request and compare quotes for maintenance and capital projects. Track vendor insurance expiration dates. Process vendor invoices.2–3 hoursPM software vendor modules, spreadsheets, and email
Owner communicationPrepare monthly owner statements. Distribute financial reports. Respond to owner inquiries about property performance. Send capital expenditure approval requests. Provide occupancy and rent collection updates.2–4 hoursAppFolio, Buildium owner portals, email, phone
Rent collection follow-upMonitor rent payment status daily. Send payment reminders to delinquent tenants. Process late fees. Initiate pre-collections communication. Prepare pay-or-quit notices for manager’s signature.2–3 hoursPM software, rent ledger, email, phone, text
Listings and marketingPost vacancies to rental platforms (Zillow, Apartments.com, Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace). Update listing photos and descriptions. Respond to rental inquiries. Schedule showings. Track lead sources.2–4 hoursZillow Rental Manager, Apartments.com, Craigslist, social media, PM software
Accounting supportProcess owner distributions. Reconcile trust accounts. Manage security deposit accounting. Track property-level income and expenses. Prepare 1099s for vendors at year-end.2–3 hoursAppFolio, Buildium, QuickBooks, Rent Manager

Total: 20–33 hours per week. That’s a near-full-time position of pure admin work. At Pavago, we place PM VAs who handle this entire scope. Browse our virtual assistant page for available talent or the full hire admin category.

Which Property Management Software Your VA Needs to Know

Property Management Software

AppFolio

The most popular PM software for companies managing 200–5,000+ units. Full-featured: accounting, leasing, maintenance, owner portals, screening, and reporting. Learning curve for a VA: 2–3 weeks for core functions (work orders, lease processing, owner statements). 4–6 weeks for advanced features (trust accounting, reporting customization).

Buildium

Popular with smaller companies (50–500 units). More intuitive than AppFolio. Strong in accounting and owner reporting. Learning curve: 1–2 weeks for core functions.

Rent Manager

Used by mid-to-large companies. Highly customizable but complex. Strong in accounting and reporting. Learning curve: 2–4 weeks. Steeper than Buildium, comparable to AppFolio.

Yardi

Enterprise-level. Most complex PM platform. Used by large management companies (1,000+ units). Learning curve: 3–6 weeks. If your VA has prior Yardi experience, it cuts onboarding significantly.

Propertyware

Focused on single-family rental management. Good for companies managing scattered-site portfolios. Learning curve: 1–2 weeks.

Key insight: Like insurance AMS systems, the PM software is trainable. Property management knowledge is not. A VA who understands what a security deposit disposition is, how a trust account works, and what a lease renewal process looks like can learn any PM software in 2–4 weeks. Screen for PM knowledge first, software second.

How to Vet a Property Management VA (5 Steps)

Step 1: Property Management Vocabulary Test

These five questions filter out candidates without PM context:

  • “What is a security deposit disposition?” (Expected: an itemized accounting of the security deposit after move-out, showing deductions for damages and returning the balance.)
  • “What is a trust account?” (Expected: a separate bank account that holds tenant security deposits and owner funds, legally required to be separate from the company’s operating account.)
  • “What is a pay-or-quit notice?” (Expected: a legal notice to a delinquent tenant demanding rent payment or vacating the property within a specified timeframe.)
  • “What’s the difference between a work order and a capital expenditure?” (Expected: work order is routine maintenance/repair; capital expenditure is a significant improvement that adds value, like a new roof or HVAC replacement.)
  • “What does ‘fair housing’ mean in the context of tenant screening?” (Expected: federal and state laws prohibiting discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, and familial status in housing decisions.)

Step 2: PM Software Navigation Test

Set up a sandbox in your PM software. Ask them to: create a tenant record, generate a work order, process a lease renewal, and prepare an owner statement. Time them. 20–30 minutes with prior experience. 45–60 minutes learning fresh. Above 60 minutes = steep onboarding ahead.

Step 3: Maintenance Coordination Scenario

Scenario: “A tenant calls at 9 PM reporting a water leak from the ceiling. The tenant is upset. Your property manager is unavailable. What do you do?”

Good VAs: assess urgency (is it an active leak or a stain?), provide emergency mitigation instructions (place a bucket, turn off the water supply if accessible), dispatch the emergency plumber from the vendor list, document the incident in the PM software, and notify the property manager with a summary. Bad VAs: tell the tenant to call back during business hours.

Step 4: Owner Communication Test

Give them a sample owner statement and ask them to write a monthly update email to the owner summarizing: occupancy status, rent collection percentage, any maintenance completed, and any upcoming capital needs. Evaluate: clarity, professionalism, and whether they proactively flag issues (e.g., a lease expiring next month with no renewal response from the tenant).

Step 5: 2-Week Trial on Live Properties

Assign them real tasks across 10–20 units: process 5 maintenance requests, send rent collection follow-ups, prepare 3 owner statements, and handle 5 rental inquiries. Track: accuracy, response speed, communication quality, and proactive behavior (do they flag a lease expiring without being asked?). For structuring the trial, our virtual assistant onboarding process guide covers the first 30 days.

We placed a VA for Rovira Property Management who handles their full operational workflow. The VA manages everything from tenant communication to document management. Read the Rovira Property Management case study. For broader VA hiring guidance, our guide to hiring a latin virtual assistant covers LATAM options for PM companies wanting time zone alignment, and our virtual assistant cost breaks down all-in pricing.

What Does a Property Management Virtual Assistant Cost in 2026

Property Management Virtual Assistant Cost
U.S. PM AdminPM VA Company (MyOutDesk, Anequim)Offshore Dedicated (Pavago)
Monthly cost$3,000–$4,500 + benefits$1,800–$2,500$1,200
Annual cost$42K–$65K all-in$21,600–$30,000$14,400
PM software proficiencyTrained on the job (2–4 months)Pre-trained on 1–2 platformsScreened for PM knowledge; trained on your software 2–4 weeks
Dedicated to your portfolio?YesSometimes (verify)Yes, 100%
Replacement3–6 month searchCompany reassignsFree, no time limit

The ROI: a property manager handling 100 units at $100/unit/month in management fees generates $10,000/month in revenue. A VA at $1,200/month frees up 20+ hours/week for the PM to acquire more doors. If the freed time results in just 10 new units, the VA generates $1,000/month in additional revenue while costing $1,200. By unit 15, the VA is cash-flow positive. By unit 30, it’s a 2.5x return.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a property management VA cost?

Offshore dedicated through Pavago: $1,200/month. PM-specific VA companies: $1,800–$2,500/month. U.S. admin: $3,000–$4,500/month + benefits.

What PM software should they know?

AppFolio, Buildium, Rent Manager, Yardi, or Propertyware. The specific platform matters less than PM knowledge: a VA who understands property management processes can learn any software in 2–4 weeks.

Can a VA handle tenant calls?

Yes. VAs handle inbound tenant calls for maintenance requests, rent inquiries, application status updates, and general questions. The Philippines and Pakistan both produce VAs with strong English phone skills. Emergency calls should route to the VA with clear escalation protocols.

Can they do accounting?

Basic PM accounting: rent processing, owner distributions, security deposit accounting, vendor invoice processing, and trust account reconciliation. Not CPA-level work. If you need auditable financials or tax preparation, pair the VA with a CPA or senior accountant.

How many units can one VA support?

One experienced VA can support 50–150 units depending on tenant turnover and maintenance volume. At 150+ units or high-maintenance portfolios, consider a second VA or splitting responsibilities (one for leasing/screening, one for maintenance/accounting).

Do they handle leasing?

Administrative leasing tasks: listing vacancies, responding to inquiries, scheduling showings (virtual or in-person with a local contact), processing applications, and preparing lease documents. They don’t physically show properties or sign leases on your behalf.

Can a VA work for individual landlords, not just companies?

Yes. Pavago has placed VAs for both PM companies and individual landlords. Landlords with 10–50 units benefit the most. Below 10 units, the admin volume may not justify full-time. Consider part-time or shared VA arrangements for smaller portfolios.

Free Your Week. Grow Your Portfolio.

Property management companies that scale past 200 units don’t do it by working more hours. They do it by removing themselves from the admin layer entirely. Every hour a property manager spends processing a maintenance work order is an hour they’re not building owner relationships, closing new management agreements, or improving tenant retention. A VA at $1,200/month handles the admin layer. The property manager handles the growth layer. That’s how portfolios scale.

Hire a Property Management VA Through Pavago

Placed for both PM companies and individual landlords. Tenant screening, lease admin, maintenance coordination, vendor management, owner communication, rent collection, listings, and accounting support. AppFolio, Buildium, Rent Manager, Yardi.

  • Property management VAs at $1,200/month
  • All major PM platforms are supported
  • Free replacements | Candidates in 1–2 weeks

Adeel Ahmed Khan is a growth marketer who builds end-to-end marketing ecosystems that turn cold traffic into revenue. He scales paid acquisition across LinkedIn, Google, Meta, TikTok, and X, then layers outbound/ABM (Clay, Smartlead) with RevOps automation in HubSpot using Zapier/Make to make pipeline more predictable and sales easier. He’s heavily data-driven (GA4, SQL, Python, Power BI) and focused on one thing: less manual work, more conversions, and growth that actually sticks.