The Commission Check Ends. Your Relationship Doesn't Have To.
You close a deal on a six-unit in Fordham. Your client — a landlord who just inherited the building or picked it up at auction — walks away with the keys. You walk away with your commission. And then nothing. That's the last dollar that building ever puts in your pocket, even though your client is about to spend the next decade dealing with HPD violations, Section 8 inspections, and 3 AM calls about busted boilers.
It doesn't have to work that way.
How Referral Income Works With DoryAngel
DoryAngel is a flat-fee property management company serving Bronx landlords — the ones who own 4 to 20 units and can't afford a 10% gross-rent management contract. When you refer one of your landlord clients to DoryAngel, you earn a referral fee at signup. No monthly tracking. No shared portals. One introduction, one payment.
Here's what the math looks like on a typical Bronx deal:
| Building Size | Monthly Rent Roll | Management Model |
|---|---|---|
| 6 units @ $1,800/unit | $10,800/mo | Flat fee — not 8–10% |
| 10 units @ $1,900/unit | $19,000/mo | Flat fee — not 8–10% |
| 15 units @ $2,000/unit | $30,000/mo | Flat fee — not 8–10% |
Contact DoryAngel directly to discuss current referral terms — they're set per broker partnership agreement and reflect the volume you bring.
Why Bronx Landlords Need This — and Why That's Good for You
The Bronx has some of the highest HPD violation rates in the five boroughs. Buildings with deferred maintenance generate Class B and Class C violations that can run $150–$300 per violation per day under New York City's Housing Maintenance Code (§27-2001 et seq.). A landlord managing six units on their own, while holding a day job, is almost guaranteed to fall behind.
When they fall behind, they call you. Because you're the person they trust. Now you're fielding calls that have nothing to do with buying or selling real estate.
Referring them to a professional property manager — before the violations stack up — protects your client relationship. It also protects your reputation. A client who loses $40,000 in HPD fines because they were overwhelmed doesn't blame themselves. They blame the person who sold them the building.
Pre-war Bronx stock (Fordham, Highbridge, Tremont, Mott Haven) requires consistent maintenance tracking and proactive DEP compliance — water, lead, mold. A landlord walking in cold from another borough or from a suburban background has no framework for this. The gap between 'I bought a building' and 'I understand NYC landlord-tenant law' is where clients get hurt. Your referral closes that gap before it opens.
The Hand-Off Doesn't Mean Losing the Relationship
The biggest fear brokers have about referring management is losing control of the client. You built that relationship. You don't want a property manager to become their new trusted advisor.
DoryAngel's model is designed to avoid exactly that. They handle:
- Rent collection and lease renewals
- HPD violation response and coordination
- Tenant communication and maintenance dispatching
- NYC Department of Buildings (DOB) compliance tracking
- Annual Local Law 11/FISP facade inspection coordination for eligible buildings
- Section 8 (Housing Choice Voucher) inspection prep under HUD standards
They do not handle sales, purchases, 1031 exchanges, or investment strategy. That stays with you. When your client is ready to buy their next building — and Bronx investors with well-managed buildings do buy again, faster — they call you.
What Bronx Brokers Get Wrong About Referrals
Most brokers either skip management referrals entirely or let their client find someone on Google. Both are mistakes.
Not referring management leaves your client exposed to violations, vacancies, and burnout — and leaves referral income on the table for you.
Referring a random management company creates a different risk: if the manager is bad, your client associates that experience with your recommendation. You lose trust on a deal you already closed.
A structured relationship with a single, vetted Bronx-specific operator — one that knows local HPD inspection patterns, NYC Rent Stabilization Order implications for buildings built before 1974, and the actual cost profile of pre-war Bronx maintenance — produces a different outcome for everyone.
How to Start Sending Referrals
The process is straightforward:
- Identify the right clients — landlords in your current pipeline buying 4–20 unit buildings in the Bronx
- Make the introduction early — before closing is ideal, but the week after closing is still the right time, before the first management headache hits
- Connect them with DoryAngel — the DoryAngel team handles the onboarding conversation from there
- Receive your referral fee per the terms you negotiated when you set up the partnership
No complex tracking. No monthly reporting. No shared CRM systems to maintain.
The Bottom Line
Every landlord client you close is a potential income stream beyond the transaction. The Bronx has over 300,000 rental units, a large share in the 4–20 unit range where individual operators consistently struggle with HPD compliance, tenant turnover, and deferred maintenance cost curves.
One structured referral partnership, consistently applied over 12 months, generates meaningful income on top of your transaction business — without adding to your workload or putting your client relationships at risk.
If you're closing deals in the Bronx and not yet referring management, you're leaving money in every building you sell.