A higher-intent accredited comparison between broad private-market access and targeted real-estate and credit structures.
By AlternativeInvesting Research Desk
Updated April 2026. Our editorial process compares access, fees, liquidity, downside, and investor fit before any outbound platform link appears on the page.
Yieldstreet is better for broader multi-asset private-market exposure, while EquityMultiple is stronger for investors who specifically want targeted real-estate and real-estate credit structures.
Download the alternative investment decision matrix.
Use the same worksheet we use to compare access, fees, liquidity windows, and how each structure is supposed to make money before you click out to any platform.
One weekly note with new platform reviews, fee changes, and access updates.
These picks are included because they match the page intent. Use them to compare structure, access, fee load, and liquidity terms before moving to any official offering page.
Featured platform
Yieldstreet
Best fit for private credit exposure and higher-yield alternatives.
Marketplace-style access to private credit, real estate, and specialty alternative offerings through a single account.
Yieldstreet is a yield-and-diversification play where returns depend on underwriting, deal selection, and whether private cash flows justify the lockup.
EquityMultiple is built for investors who want more targeted private real-estate and credit exposure where underwriting and structure selection drive the outcome.
accredited real-estate investorstargeted deal selectionincome plus appreciation
Investors should decide whether they want a broader private-markets menu or a more concentrated real-estate underwriting path.
Featured platform
Yieldstreet
Best fit for private credit exposure and higher-yield alternatives.
Marketplace-style access to private credit, real estate, and specialty alternative offerings through a single account.
Yieldstreet is a yield-and-diversification play where returns depend on underwriting, deal selection, and whether private cash flows justify the lockup.
Key risks include illiquidity, valuation opacity, leverage, manager execution risk, concentration, and tax complexity. The category matters, but structure and manager quality matter just as much.
How should I evaluate fees?
Look for management fees, servicing fees, performance fees, deal-level expenses, and exit-related economics. The right benchmark is net return after all fees, not headline yield alone.