There is a common assumption in student housing that newer always wins. The thinking goes that if a building is fifteen or twenty years old, it is already losing the leasing race to the shiny new development down the street.
That assumption is wrong, and it is costing owners real money.
HH Red Stone, a national property management company overseeing nearly 10,000 beds across student housing, multifamily, and mixed-use communities, works with owners of older assets regularly. And the pattern is consistent: the gap between older stock and purpose-built housing is rarely about the building itself. It is almost always about operations.
The Real Reason Purpose-Built Housing Wins
Purpose-built student housing does not outperform older properties because it is newer. It outperforms because it removes friction.
Every well-run new development has been designed to anticipate what students need: clear signage, a move-in process that works, common areas that are actually usable, reliable internet, and a leasing experience that feels professional from the first tour to the signed lease.
Older assets can replicate every single one of those things without touching a wall. The question is whether ownership and management are willing to be intentional about it.
“Students and parents can forgive an older building,” says Teddy Abdelmalek, SVP of Business Development at HH Red Stone. “They are much less forgiving of confusion, poor communication, dirty common areas, slow maintenance, bad signage, weak internet, unclear leasing processes, or a model unit that does not show well.”
Start With the Arrival Experience
If there is one place to focus first, it is the moment someone walks through the door, whether that is a prospective resident on a tour or a current resident coming home after class.
What does the office look like? Is the model unit ready to show at any time, or does it require thirty minutes of notice? Is the staff prepared to give a tour that builds confidence, or are they scrambling? Are packages organized? Is the signage clear enough that a first-time visitor does not have to ask three people where to go?
These are not expensive fixes. They are operational discipline problems. And they are exactly the kind of friction that sends a prospective resident to the newer property down the road, not because that property has granite countertops, but because it felt easier to be there.
What Friction Actually Costs
Daily friction compounds quickly in student housing. A work order that sits for five days becomes a bad review. A bad review becomes a harder leasing conversation. A harder leasing conversation becomes a concession. A concession becomes a hit to NOI. And a hit to NOI becomes a valuation problem.
Owners of older assets often focus their energy on what they cannot change, such as the age of the building, the unit finishes, and the amenity package. That energy is better spent on what they can change immediately, including response times, communication quality, common area presentation, leasing team preparation, and the everyday experience of living in the building.
“You do not always need to build a resort pool to compete,” Abdelmalek says. “Sometimes you need to make the study room usable, make the fitness center feel clean and active, upgrade lighting, improve furniture, fix Wi-Fi pain points, add better resident events, and create a leasing experience that feels professional.”
The Supportive Independence Factor
There is another dimension that older assets frequently miss, particularly in markets where universities are pushing more students off campus due to enrollment growth, limited on-campus capacity, or affordability pressure.
When students move off campus, often for the first time, they still need structure. They may have signed a lease, but that does not mean they are fully equipped to navigate independent living. The operators who understand that distinction are the ones building lasting reputations in those markets.
On the ground, this looks like strong move-in communication, clear lease expectations, responsive maintenance, and staff who understand student behavior. It means helping a first-time renter understand how to submit a work order, what the noise policy is, how packages are handled. These things sound basic. When they are handled poorly, they create friction, bad reviews, delinquency, and turnover. When they are handled well, they create renewals.
Older assets that get this right, that become genuinely easier to live in than the newer competition, do not just survive. They hold occupancy, protect rental rate, and build the kind of resident loyalty that shows up in the bottom line.
The building’s age is not the problem. The operation is. And that is entirely fixable.
HH Red Stone is the property management arm of HH Group, managing approximately 10,000 beds across multiple asset classes, including student housing, multifamily, affordable, and mixed-use properties nationwide. After a decade of exclusively managing HH Group’s owned portfolio, the company launched its third-party management vertical to serve other owners with the same institutional-grade approach it applies to its own assets. HH Red Stone’s operating philosophy centers on “functional hospitality,” treating residents as CEOs and maintaining operations with the discipline and consistency that drives sustainable success. Website: www.hhredstone.com
Disclaimer: This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. The views and opinions expressed herein reflect those of the individuals quoted and do not represent an endorsement of any company, product, or service mentioned. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult qualified professionals before making any investment decisions.











