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Platform profile

Arrived Review 2026

Fractional real-estate platform built around individual rental and vacation properties for investors starting with smaller checks.

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.

Return caseArrived can make sense when you want targeted rental income and home-price exposure without directly managing a property yourself.

Use the review on this page first, then continue to the platform's official site if it still fits your access level, minimum, and liquidity needs.

Review snapshot

Access
Non-accredited
Minimum
$100
Liquidity
Multi-year hold periods with no daily liquidity
Fees
Property-level management and sourcing costs vary by offering
Return focus
Balanced
Risk level
Moderate
Complexity
Low
Hold period
5 to 7+ years

Overall rating

4.1/ 5

Rating label

Strong Fit

Non-accredited access, $100 minimum

Arrived looks workable, but the public complaint pattern is material enough that fit and expectations matter a lot.

Weighted toward ease-of-use positives, with moderation for liquidity and support complaints.

Investor fit

4.7 / 5

How sensible the structure looks for the target investor once access, minimum, and complexity are considered.

Public feedback

3.7 / 5

Weighted from recurring complaint and praise themes. Confidence: medium.

Liquidity

2.3 / 5

Multi-year hold periods with no daily liquidity

Pros

  • Users often praise the simple property-by-property experience and low entry point.
  • Transparency and easy browsing come up positively in public reviews.
  • The direct real-estate concept resonates with beginners.

Cons

  • Long hold periods and no real liquidity remain a common downside.
  • Popular listings selling out quickly is a recurring frustration.
  • A smaller number of BBB complaints raise support and account-handling concerns.

Quick take

Best fit

rental-property exposure

Main watchout

You want broad diversification in one click

Hold profile

5 to 7+ years

Before you click out

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What Arrived does well

Arrived gives smaller investors a way to buy into individual rental or vacation homes without becoming a landlord. That makes it more intuitive than many private funds because you can understand the asset in front of you.

The platform's main appeal is accessibility. With a relatively low minimum and simple onboarding, it gives new investors a direct property-level alternative to diversified funds.

What investors should not ignore

Property-level access also means property-level concentration. A single home, local market, or operating issue can matter far more here than on a diversified fund platform.

Arrived is therefore better used as a targeted real-estate sleeve, not as a substitute for broad diversification. The interface is approachable, but the capital is still locked up for years and the distributions are not guaranteed.

Investor verdict

Arrived is a good fit for investors who want hands-on exposure to individual rental properties with a modest starting check. It is weaker for investors who mainly want one simple diversified real-estate allocation.

Current official notes

  • Arrived's public site continues to advertise $100 minimums for many offerings.
  • Hold periods and property economics vary meaningfully from one offering to another.

Trust notes

  • Property concentration matters
  • Distribution history can vary
  • Holds are long even if the interface feels simple

Who should probably pass

  • You want broad diversification in one click
  • You need redemption windows
  • You only want institutionally diversified real-estate funds

FAQs

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.

What are the main risks?

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.

Are alternative investments liquid?

Usually not in the same way as public stocks or ETFs. Many alternatives have quarterly redemption windows, secondary market limits, or multi-year lockups.