Looking for a Highland Park multifamily broker? Michael Sterman, Senior Managing Director Investments at Marcus & Millichap and founder of the Sterman Multifamily Group, has closed $1.41 billion across 254 Los Angeles apartment building transactions over 14 years. If you own an apartment building in Highland Park and are weighing a sale, this is the team that prices it against Highland Park's real buyer pool and rules — not a generic LA average.
Highland Park has seen one of the sharper demographic and rental-pricing transitions of any LA submarket in the last fifteen years. The neighborhood's multifamily inventory — predominantly pre-1978, long-tenured, deeply community-anchored — has compounded the widest in-place-to-market rent gaps in northeast LA. For sellers, those gaps are the single most consequential pricing variable in any Highland Park transaction. The honest conversation about selling Highland Park multifamily starts with the tenants, not with the building.
A Highland Park building that has been in the same ownership for twenty or thirty years often has tenants who have been in place for fifteen or twenty years themselves. Rents are significantly below market. The community relationships are deep. Many owners know their tenants personally and have extended below-market rents for reasons that go beyond pure economics. For the next buyer, this produces specific underwriting challenges. The in-place-to-market gap is wide. The path to closing that gap through allowable rent increases alone is long and, under the 2026 RSO rewrite, longer still. The buyer is pricing these gaps as a durable discount on NOI. For the seller, this also produces a specific non-financial decision: what happens to the long-tenured tenants when the building sells. Different buyer profiles pursue different tenant strategies. This is a consideration some Highland Park owners take into account alongside pricing.
Highland Park is LA City. Pre-1978 multifamily — the dominant inventory here — is subject to LA City RSO and the December 2025 rewrite effective July 2026. Post-1995 construction is limited in Highland Park relative to more development-active submarkets. The RSO rewrite's effect on Highland Park is especially acute: lower allowable annual increases, eliminated utility and dependent-occupant bumps, applied to a pre-1978-dominant stock with exceptionally wide in-place-to-market gaps. The NOI trajectory repricing is material.
Value in Highland Park turns on vintage, rent-control status, your in-place rents versus market, and which buyer pool fits your building — not a single neighborhood average. Michael underwrites your specific Highland Park building the way a real buyer will, then tells you what it should bring and how to get there. No obligation.
Request a Free Highland Park Building Evaluation →Local operators with northeast LA concentration. Often multi-generational, patient, community-engaged. Value-add-focused private equity and sophisticated smaller institutional buyers who see Highland Park's in-place-to-market gap as an opportunity — while underwriting the regulatory and operational complexity of capturing it.
1031 exchangers from other LA submarkets, particularly those seeking a specific Highland Park-adjacent investment thesis rather than purely yield-maximized placement. Individual buyers, including some seeking long-hold positions in a specific culturally-significant submarket.
Michael Sterman has spent 14 years specializing exclusively in Los Angeles multifamily, closing 254 transactions worth $1.41 billion. He knows how Highland Park buildings are valued, who buys them, and what it takes to get a clean deal closed here. CA DRE License #01911703.
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