By Jamie Bateman, CEO — Labrador Lending
Mortgage Note Fund vs. REIT: The Complete Comparison for Accredited Investors (2026)
A mortgage note fund is a debt investment — you become the lender. A REIT is an equity investment — you become a partial property owner. That single distinction drives every meaningful difference in returns, income timing, taxes, market correlation, and risk. This guide delivers a complete, category-by-category comparison so you can determine which fits your goals — or whether the right answer is both.
📋 Key Takeaways
- Mortgage note funds are debt investments; most REITs are equity investments — this single difference drives everything else.
- Private mortgage note funds like the Integrity Income Fund target 8–10% annual preferred returns paid monthly — significantly above typical public REIT dividend yields of 3–6%.
- Note funds have low correlation to the stock market because returns come from borrower loan payments, not market prices or investor sentiment.
- REITs offer high liquidity (daily trading on exchanges); the Integrity Income Fund requires a 12-month minimum commitment — the primary trade-off.
- Both can be held in a Self-Directed IRA (SDIRA) for tax-advantaged compounding.
- The Integrity Income Fund has delivered zero missed monthly distributions since launching in June 2022.
- Many accredited investors hold both: REITs for equity exposure and liquidity; note funds for monthly income and low market correlation.
Note: some REITs — called Mortgage REITs (mREITs) — also invest in real estate debt, making them structurally closer to note funds than to equity REITs. Where meaningful, we call out those differences. Use the comparison tables and verdict sections to determine which fits your goals — or whether the right answer is both.
Skip to any section:
- What Is the Fundamental Difference Between a Mortgage Note Fund and a REIT?
- Where Does Each Investment Sit in the Real Estate Capital Stack?
- How Do Mortgage Note Funds and REITs Compare Side by Side?
- Which Pays More — and When?
- What Are the Risk Differences?
- What Is the Liquidity Difference?
- How Are They Taxed Differently?
- How Does Each Behave When Markets Move?
- Which Wins in Each Category?
- Who Should Choose Which?
- FAQ
What Is the Fundamental Difference Between a Mortgage Note Fund and a REIT?
Every real estate transaction involves two parties: the borrower (who takes a loan) and the lender (who provides it). REITs and mortgage note funds represent opposite sides of this transaction.
Not all REITs are the same. Equity REITs own and operate physical properties—think apartment complexes, office buildings, or shopping centers. Mortgage REITs (mREITs) invest in real estate debt, including mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and commercial mortgages—making them structurally more similar to mortgage note funds than to equity REITs.
Both mortgage note funds and mREITs are debt investments in real estate, but they differ significantly in liquidity (mREITs trade daily on exchanges; note funds do not), tax structure (mREITs issue 1099-DIV and must distribute 90% of taxable income; private note funds issue K-1 and offer more flexibility), and risk profile (mREITs are highly sensitive to interest rate movements; private note fund returns are driven by individual loan performance). Where this guide references “REITs,” it primarily addresses publicly traded equity REITs, which are the most common comparison point—but the mREIT distinction is noted throughout where relevant.
| Feature | Mortgage Note Fund | REIT |
|---|---|---|
| Investment Type | Debt — you own the loan | Equity — you own a share of properties |
| What You Hold | Mortgage notes (promissory notes secured by real property) | Ownership interest in a trust that holds real estate |
| Your Role | The bank — you are the lender | Partial property owner — you are the landlord (via REIT) |
| Income Source | Borrower interest payments on loans | Rental income from tenants; property appreciation |
| Return Driver | Loan performance; resolution of non-performing notes | Occupancy rates, rental growth, property values, market conditions |
| Market Sensitivity | Low — contractual loan payments | High (public) / Moderate (private) |
A REIT invests in real estate. A mortgage note fund invests against real estate as collateral. When you invest in a mortgage note fund, the property is your backstop—not your operating business.
Mortgage Note Fund vs. Mortgage REIT (mREIT): A Closer Look
Because both mortgage note funds and mREITs invest in real estate debt, they are often confused. Here is how they differ on the dimensions that matter most to investors:
| Feature | Mortgage Note Fund (e.g., Integrity Income Fund) |
Mortgage REIT (mREIT) |
|---|---|---|
| Structure | Private partnership or LLC; investor acts as lender | Publicly traded company registered with the SEC |
| Assets Held | Individual private mortgage notes secured by real property | Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and commercial mortgages |
| Liquidity | Low — 12–36 month commitment typical | High — traded on major stock exchanges daily |
| Income Distribution | Monthly distributions — a defining characteristic of mortgage note funds; IIF has paid every month since June 2022 | Required to distribute 90%+ of taxable income; typically quarterly |
| Interest Rate Sensitivity | Lower — tied to individual loan performance | High — MBS prices move inversely with interest rates |
| Market Volatility | Lower — appraised/contractual value | Higher — stock market value fluctuates daily |
| Tax Reporting | Schedule K-1 (may allow deductions) | 1099-DIV (dividends taxed as ordinary income) |
| Potential Yield | Higher potential (private market premium) | Historically high dividend yields, but volatile |
Both mortgage note funds and mREITs are real estate debt investments. The key trade-off is liquidity vs. yield: mREITs offer instant liquidity and regulatory transparency; private note funds offer higher potential returns, lower volatility, and greater tax flexibility.
Where Does Each Investment Sit in the Real Estate Capital Stack?
Every real estate deal has a capital stack—a hierarchy of capital providers ranked by risk, seniority, and return. Understanding where your investment sits in this stack is fundamental to understanding risk and return expectations.
▲ The Labrador Lending Integrity Income Fund holds predominantly first-lien mortgage notes — the most senior position in the capital stack. Debt holders in the first-lien position are paid before all equity investors in a default scenario.
The capital stack explains why mortgage note funds have lower volatility than equity investments: debt holders are paid first. In a default, the lender (note holder) has legal priority to recover through the property before any equity investors receive anything.
A first-lien mortgage note is the primary loan secured by a property. In the event of borrower default, the first-lien holder has the legal right to foreclose and recover their capital before any other creditor or equity investor receives proceeds from the property sale. This seniority is a fundamental structural protection for note investors.
How Do Mortgage Note Funds and REITs Compare Side by Side? (15 Categories)
Here is the full 15-category comparison between a private mortgage note fund (using Labrador Lending’s Integrity Income Fund as the benchmark) and both public and private REITs:
| Category | Mortgage Note Fund (Integrity Income Fund) |
Public REIT | Private REIT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Investment Type | Debt (first-lien loans) | Equity (property ownership) | Equity (property ownership) |
| Target Annual Yield | 8% (Class B) — 10% (Class C) | 3–6% dividend yield | 6–10% preferred return |
| Total Return Potential | Yield-focused; limited appreciation | Yield + property appreciation | Yield + property appreciation |
| Distribution Frequency | Monthly | Quarterly (most) | Quarterly / Annual |
| Investor Eligibility | Accredited only | Anyone — publicly traded | Accredited (typically) |
| Minimum Investment | $25,000 (Class B) | $100,000 (Class C) | $1 (single share) | $25,000–$100,000+ typical |
| Liquidity | Illiquid — IIF: 12-month commitment; private note funds typically range from 12 months to 5+ years | Highly Liquid — daily trading | Illiquid — multi-year lock-up |
| Stock Market Correlation | Low | High — trades on exchanges | Moderate |
| Real Estate Collateral | Yes — first-lien residential | Yes — property ownership | Yes — property ownership |
| Fund-Level Leverage | None | Typically 40–60% LTV | Typically leveraged |
| Tax Document | Schedule K-1 (LLC) | 1099-DIV | Schedule K-1 |
| Income Classification | Interest income (ordinary) | Ordinary income + ROC + cap gains | Ordinary income (mostly) |
| SDIRA Compatible | Yes | Yes (standard brokerage IRA) | Yes (SDIRA) |
| UBTI Risk in IRA | Low — no fund leverage | Possible if leveraged | Common — leveraged structure |
| Track Record (Labrador) | Zero missed distributions since June 2022 | Public track record available | Varies by fund |
Which Pays More — and When? Returns & Income Compared
One of the most important distinctions between mortgage note funds and REITs is not just how much they pay — it’s when they pay it. According to Nareit (2025), the average equity REIT dividend yield has historically ranged between 3–5%. Private mortgage note funds like the Integrity Income Fund target 8–10% preferred returns — a meaningful premium reflecting the private market illiquidity discount.1
Target Annual Yield Comparison
Yield ranges are illustrative based on market data as of early 2026. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Public REIT yield reflects dividend yield only, not total return including appreciation.
Income Distribution Timing
| Investment | Distribution Frequency | Consistency | Income Predictability |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🐾 Integrity Income Fund | Monthly | Zero missed distributions since June 2022 | High (contractual loan payments) |
| Public REIT (equity) | Quarterly | Can be cut or suspended | Moderate (rental market dependent) |
| Mortgage REIT (mREIT) | Quarterly | Volatile — interest rate sensitive | Low-Moderate |
| Private REIT | Quarterly / Annual | Varies by fund | Moderate |
| S&P 500 ETF | Quarterly | Variable — can be cut | Low (market dependent) |
For investors supplementing retirement income, managing living expenses, or reinvesting for compounding, receiving income monthly vs. quarterly is a meaningful practical difference. Over 12 months, monthly distributions provide 12 separate reinvestment opportunities vs. 4—accelerating compounding in SDIRA and reinvestment strategies.
What Are the Risk Differences Between Mortgage Note Funds and REITs?
Both note funds and REITs carry risk. The key is understanding which types of risk each carries—they differ substantially.
| Risk Type | Mortgage Note Fund | Public REIT |
|---|---|---|
| Market Price Risk | Low — private placement, no daily price | High — price can drop 30–50% in market downturns |
| Borrower Default Risk | Present — mitigated by first-lien collateral | None — no borrower relationship |
| Illiquidity Risk | High — IIF: 12-month commitment; note funds typically 12 months to 5+ years; no exchange trading | Low — daily trading on exchanges |
| Vacancy / Rent Risk | None — no property ownership | Present — vacancy reduces income |
| Leverage Risk | None — Integrity Income Fund uses no leverage Note: some mortgage note funds do use leverage, which increases risk |
High — most REITs are 40–60% leveraged |
| Interest Rate Risk | Moderate — affects note pricing | High — rising rates compress valuations |
| Manager Risk | Present — performance depends on team quality | Present — management quality varies by REIT |
| Property Value Decline | Indirect — reduces collateral value but debt is senior | Direct — equity value declines with property prices |
Most public REITs carry debt at the property level (40–60% loan-to-value). When property values decline, leveraged equity suffers amplified losses. Labrador Lending’s Integrity Income Fund uses zero fund-level leverage—returns come entirely from the underlying loan portfolio, with no borrowed capital amplifying either gains or losses. Note: not all mortgage note funds are unlevered. Some private note funds do use leverage to amplify returns, which also increases risk. Always confirm a fund’s leverage policy before investing.
What Is the Liquidity Difference Between a Mortgage Note Fund and a REIT?
This is where REITs hold a clear structural advantage over private mortgage note funds—and where investors must be honest with themselves about their needs.
| Liquidity Factor | Mortgage Note Fund | Public REIT |
|---|---|---|
| How to Exit | Redemption at commitment end (Integrity Income Fund: 12 months; other funds vary — typically 12 months to 5+ years) | Sell shares on exchange any trading day |
| Emergency Access | Generally not available during commitment period | Sell instantly during market hours |
| Exit Costs | Typically none at commitment end | Brokerage commissions (minimal) |
| Price Certainty at Exit | Higher — defined redemption terms | Lower — market price fluctuates |
| Best For | Capital you can commit for the fund’s full term (IIF: 12 months; other funds may require 2–5+ years) | Capital you may need on short notice |
Only invest in a mortgage note fund with capital you can commit for the fund’s full commitment period without needing access. Private note fund terms typically range from 12 months to 5+ years—the Integrity Income Fund’s 12-month term is on the shorter, more investor-friendly end of the spectrum. The liquidity trade-off is the price of lower market correlation and higher targeted income. Never invest emergency reserves or short-term capital in a private placement.
How Are Mortgage Note Funds and REITs Taxed Differently?
Tax efficiency can significantly affect net returns — especially for investors in high income brackets. According to the IRS, REITs are required to distribute at least 90% of taxable income to shareholders annually, qualifying for a special pass-through structure.2 Here’s how each investment type is taxed:
| Tax Factor | Mortgage Note Fund | Public REIT |
|---|---|---|
| Tax Document | Schedule K-1 (if LLC structure) | 1099-DIV |
| Income Type | Ordinary interest income | Ordinary dividends + qualified dividends + return of capital + capital gains |
| Qualified Dividend Rate? | No — interest income taxed as ordinary | Partially — some portion may qualify |
| QBI Deduction (Sec. 199A) | Consult CPA — depends on structure | Yes — REIT dividends typically eligible for 20% QBI deduction |
| SDIRA Compatible | Yes — Self-Directed IRA | Yes — traditional IRA/Roth IRA |
| UBTI Risk in IRA | Low — no fund leverage = minimal UBTI risk | Possible — if held in IRA through margin |
| Depreciation Benefit | No — does not own property | Yes — REITs pass through depreciation benefits |
REITs have a structural tax advantage: the 20% Section 199A deduction on qualified REIT dividends (for eligible taxpayers) and property depreciation pass-through. Mortgage note funds may be more tax-efficient inside a Roth SDIRA, where interest income compounds entirely tax-free. The optimal approach depends on your tax bracket, IRA capacity, and investment timeline—consult a CPA before making tax-motivated investment decisions.
How Do Mortgage Note Funds and REITs Behave When Markets Move?
For investors seeking true diversification — not just diversification within a single asset class — market correlation matters as much as expected returns. Public REITs trade on stock exchanges and have historically shown strong correlation to broad equity markets. According to Nareit research, REIT ETFs declined 25–30% during the 2022 rate hike cycle, while private mortgage note funds with contractual loan-payment income experienced minimal price impact.3
| Correlation Factor | Mortgage Note Fund | Public REIT |
|---|---|---|
| Correlation to S&P 500 | Low — returns not driven by market prices | High — REIT ETFs move with equity markets |
| 2020 COVID Crash Impact | Minimal price impact (no daily price) | REIT ETFs fell 40–50% in March 2020 |
| 2022 Rate Hike Impact | Higher origination yields available; limited price volatility | Public REITs fell 25–30% in 2022 |
| Inflation Protection | Moderate — fixed loan rates don’t rise with inflation | Strong — rents and property values tend to rise with inflation |
| Diversification Value | High — true portfolio diversifier for equity-heavy portfolios | Limited — correlated with equity holdings |
Investors who hold 70–90% of their portfolio in equities often seek alternatives that don’t “zig” when stocks “zag.” Public REITs, despite being real estate, actually have high correlation to the S&P 500—they are traded on the same exchanges by the same sentiment-driven investors. Private mortgage note funds, by contrast, derive returns from contractual loan payments that continue regardless of what equity markets do in any given month.
Which Wins in Each Category: Mortgage Note Fund or REIT?
Based on the full analysis above, here is a summary verdict for each key investment category:
Monthly Income
Many private note funds, including the Integrity Income Fund, pay monthly distributions vs. typical quarterly REIT payments—better for income-dependent investors. The Integrity Income Fund has paid every distribution on time since June 2022.
Market Correlation
Private note funds generally have low correlation to public equity markets, since returns are driven by contractual loan payments rather than investor sentiment or stock prices. The Integrity Income Fund holds no publicly traded assets.
Leverage Risk
Integrity Income Fund uses zero fund-level leverage. Most REITs are 40–60% leveraged.
Income Yield
8–10% targeted preferred return vs. 3–6% public REIT dividend yield. Significantly higher income.
Liquidity
Public REITs trade daily. The Integrity Income Fund requires a 12-month commitment with no exchange trading—one of the shorter lock-up periods in private credit (many note funds require 2–5+ years).
Accessibility
Public REITs are open to all investors. Most private note funds require accreditation and $25K+ minimums—though some use Reg A+, which allows non-accredited investors to participate.
Inflation Protection
Property values and rents rise with inflation. Fixed-rate note yields do not adjust automatically.
Tax Benefits (QBI)
Eligible investors may deduct 20% of qualified REIT dividends under Section 199A. Note funds do not qualify.
SDIRA Compatibility
Both work in self-directed retirement accounts. Note fund UBTI risk is lower due to no leverage; REIT standard IRA setup is simpler.
Total Return Potential
REITs offer appreciation upside beyond income. Note funds focus on income yield. Equity investors in growth mode may prefer REITs; income investors prefer note funds.
Who Should Choose a Mortgage Note Fund vs. a REIT?
Income-Seeking Accredited Investors
You need monthly cash flow and prefer higher yields over liquidity. Capital can be committed 12+ months.
Equity-Heavy Portfolio Diversifiers
You already hold significant stocks and stock-correlated assets and want a genuine low-correlation income stream.
Market Skeptics
You’re concerned about stock market valuations and want returns that don’t depend on investor sentiment or market prices.
Liquidity-Conscious Investors
You may need access to your capital within the next 12 months. Public REITs can be sold any trading day.
Non-Accredited Investors
Public REITs are open to everyone. Many private note funds require accreditation—though some use Reg A+, which allows non-accredited investor participation within SEC limits.
Appreciation-Focused Investors
You want real estate equity upside—rising property values and rents—alongside income. REITs deliver this; note funds do not.
Accredited Portfolio Builders
Most accredited investors benefit from holding both: REIT for equity exposure and liquidity; note fund for monthly income and low correlation.
Sophisticated accredited investors often allocate to both simultaneously. A common approach: hold public REITs in a taxable brokerage for liquidity and equity exposure; allocate a portion of an SDIRA or locked-up capital to a private mortgage note fund for monthly income, low market correlation, and tax-deferred or tax-free compounding. The two complement rather than compete with each other in a well-structured portfolio.
Where Can I Learn More About Mortgage Note Fund Investing?
Before making any investment decision, Labrador Lending encourages thorough due diligence. These free resources will help:
- What Is a Mortgage Note Fund? — fundamentals of how note funds work, returns, and who they’re for
- Investing in Mortgage Note Funds with an SDIRA — how to use a self-directed IRA for tax-advantaged note fund investing
- Integrity Income Fund Overview PDF — detailed fund structure, investment mechanics, and team background
- Accredited Investor Guide 2026 — comprehensive comparison of all investor pathways including fund and asset management options
- Self-Directed IRA Investment Guide — how to use SDIRA and Roth SDIRA for mortgage note fund investing
- Monthly Live Webinars — Q&A with Jamie Bateman on note investing, market conditions, and fund performance
Frequently Asked Questions: Mortgage Note Fund vs. REIT
A REIT owns physical real estate properties and earns income from rents and appreciation—it is an equity investment. A mortgage note fund owns the loans secured by real estate, not the properties themselves—it is a debt investment. This core distinction drives differences in returns, income frequency, tax treatment, market correlation, leverage, and risk profile.
Private mortgage note funds typically target higher income yields than public REITs. Labrador Lending’s Integrity Income Fund targets 8% (Class B, $25,000 minimum) or 10% (Class C, $100,000 minimum) annual preferred returns paid monthly. Public REIT dividend yields average 3–6%. However, public REITs offer total return potential through property appreciation, which note funds generally do not. The comparison depends on whether you are measuring income yield alone or total return.
They carry different risk profiles, not universally safer or riskier. Mortgage note funds have lower market price volatility (no daily trading), lower market correlation, and benefit from first-lien collateral protection. Public REITs carry higher market price risk and leverage risk, but are far more liquid. Note funds carry significant illiquidity risk—capital is locked up for the commitment period (typically 12 months to 5+ years depending on the fund). Both carry manager risk. Neither is universally safer; the right choice depends on your risk tolerance, liquidity needs, and portfolio context.
No—private mortgage note funds have low correlation to stock market movements. Returns are driven by borrower loan repayments, which are contractual obligations that continue regardless of what equity markets do. Public REITs, by contrast, trade on stock exchanges and have historically shown significant correlation to broad equity market movements—falling sharply in market downturns such as March 2020 and 2022. This makes private mortgage note funds a stronger diversification tool for equity-heavy portfolios.
Mortgage note funds pay monthly distributions from borrower interest payments collected on loans in the portfolio. Public REITs most commonly pay quarterly dividends from rental income. The Integrity Income Fund has paid monthly distributions every month since launching in June 2022, with zero missed distributions. Monthly payments provide more frequent income for investors relying on cash flow or pursuing an accelerated reinvestment strategy.
Yes—and for many accredited investors, this is the optimal strategy. REITs provide liquid equity real estate exposure, inflation protection, and property appreciation potential. Mortgage note funds provide monthly income, low market correlation, and debt-based real estate exposure with no fund-level leverage. Together, they provide complementary risk and return profiles across the real estate capital stack. A common approach is to hold REITs in a taxable brokerage and a note fund in an SDIRA for tax-advantaged compounding.
REIT dividends are typically taxed as ordinary income, but eligible investors may benefit from the 20% Section 199A qualified business income deduction on REIT dividends. REITs also pass through depreciation benefits that can shelter a portion of income. Mortgage note fund income is typically interest income reported via Schedule K-1, taxed as ordinary income without QBI deduction benefits. Both can be held in self-directed retirement accounts. Mortgage note funds like the Integrity Income Fund use no leverage, minimizing UBTI risk in IRAs. Always consult a qualified CPA before making tax-motivated investment decisions.
Many private mortgage note funds, including the Integrity Income Fund, are offered under SEC Regulation D and require accredited investor status. However, some note funds are offered under SEC Regulation A+ (Reg A+), which does not require accredited status and is open to non-accredited investors within SEC offering limits—though this structure is less common for private mortgage note strategies. Public REITs, by contrast, are available to all investors. Non-accredited investors interested in mortgage note investing can also access Labrador Lending’s Asset Management Service.
A mortgage REIT (mREIT) is a publicly traded REIT that invests in mortgage-backed securities and other mortgage debt—so it is actually more similar to a note fund than an equity REIT. However, mREITs are publicly traded (high liquidity but also high market correlation), are typically heavily leveraged with borrowed capital, and are particularly sensitive to interest rate movements. Private mortgage note funds like the Integrity Income Fund are unleveraged, illiquid, and focus on whole residential loans rather than mortgage-backed securities—providing very different risk characteristics despite both being debt investments.
Explore the Integrity Income Fund
If monthly distributions, low market correlation, and real estate-backed income align with your goals, the Integrity Income Fund may be worth a closer look. Accredited investors can access Class B (8% targeted, $25,000 min) or Class C (10% targeted, $100,000 min). Zero missed distributions since June 2022.
Learn About the Integrity Income Fund Download Free Investor ResourcesIf you don’t yet qualify as an accredited investor, you have options. Some mortgage note funds use SEC Regulation A+ (Reg A+), which allows non-accredited investors to participate within SEC offering limits. Labrador Lending’s Asset Management Service is also open to all investors who want to own individual notes directly with professional operational support.
Sources & References
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, legal advice, or tax advice. Comparisons to REITs are general in nature and based on publicly available data as of early 2026; individual REIT performance varies significantly. The Integrity Income Fund is a private placement offered under SEC Regulation D available only to accredited investors. All investments involve risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Targeted returns are not guaranteed. Consult qualified legal, tax, and financial professionals before making investment decisions. Labrador Lending, LLC is not a registered investment advisor.