Preferred Return Calculator

Model how preferred return, catch-up provisions, and profit splits affect LP and GP economics. Adjust fund size, hurdle rate, and total distributions to see the full waterfall breakdown.

GP commits the remaining percentage.
100% = full catch-up (standard). 0% = no catch-up.
Waterfall Breakdown
Step 1: Return of Capital
LP Capital Contributed $98,000,000
GP Capital Contributed $2,000,000
Step 2: Preferred Return
LP Preferred Return Amount $0
Preferred Return Met? No
Shortfall (if any) $0
Step 3: GP Catch-Up
Catch-Up Amount to GP $0
Step 4: Remaining Profit Split
Remaining Profit to Split $0
LP Share (80%) $0
GP Share (20%) $0
Totals
Total to LP $0
Total Carry to GP $0
Effective Carry to GP 0.0%
Distribution Breakdown
Return of Capital LP Pref Return GP Catch-Up LP Profit Split GP Profit Split
Understanding your fund's waterfall is step one. Finding LPs who accept your terms is step two. Match with institutional investors whose mandate fits your fund.
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What Is a Preferred Return?

A preferred return (also called a hurdle rate) is the minimum annual return that limited partners must receive before the general partner earns any carried interest. The industry standard is 8% per year, though funds may negotiate anywhere from 6% to 12% depending on strategy, asset class, and market conditions.

The preferred return exists to align GP incentives with LP outcomes. If the fund cannot beat the hurdle, the GP should not be rewarded with carry. This creates a clear priority of distributions: LPs receive their capital back first, then the preferred return on that capital, and only after both conditions are met does the GP begin participating in profits.

How the GP Catch-Up Works

Once LPs receive their preferred return, most fund agreements include a catch-up provision. In a standard 80/20 structure with 100% catch-up, the GP receives 100% of the next tranche of profits until they have received 20% of all profits distributed so far (including the preferred return). This ensures the GP is not permanently penalized for the existence of the pref.

Some funds use a partial catch-up (for example, 50%), meaning the GP receives 50% of profits during the catch-up phase while the other 50% continues flowing to LPs. A partial catch-up slows the GP's path to full carry but is considered more LP-friendly. Set the Catch-Up Rate input above to model different catch-up structures.

Preferred Return and Carried Interest

Preferred return and carried interest are two sides of the same coin. The pref protects LP downside by ensuring a minimum return before GP profit-sharing begins. Carry rewards the GP for generating returns above that minimum. A higher preferred return makes it harder for the GP to earn carry, which is why LPs negotiate for higher hurdles and GPs push for lower ones.

Use the Carried Interest Calculator to model total GP economics including management fees and per-partner distributions. For full multi-tier distribution modeling, see the Waterfall Distribution Calculator.

Compounded Preferred Return

This calculator uses a compounded preferred return, meaning the hurdle accrues on a compounded basis over the investment period. Some LPAs specify a simple (non-compounding) preferred return, which results in a lower hurdle amount. For example, on $98M of LP capital over 5 years, an 8% compounded pref produces a hurdle of approximately $46M, while a simple 8% pref produces $39.2M. The compounding method should be specified clearly in the fund's limited partnership agreement.

Methodology

This calculator models a four-step European (whole-fund) waterfall:

Step 1: Return all contributed capital to LPs and GP
Step 2: LP Pref = LP Capital × (1 + Rate)Years − LP Capital
Step 3: GP Catch-Up = Carry% / (1 − Carry%) × LP Pref
Step 4: Remaining profits split LP (1 − Carry%) / GP (Carry%)

The catch-up target assumes the GP should ultimately receive their carry percentage of all profits (including the preferred return tranche). At 100% catch-up, the GP receives all profits during the catch-up phase. At partial catch-up rates, the GP receives only that percentage during the catch-up phase, with the balance going to LPs.

This calculator is for illustrative purposes only. Actual fund waterfalls vary significantly based on the limited partnership agreement (LPA), including clawback provisions, GP commitment terms, and multi-tier distribution structures. Consult your fund counsel for specific calculations.