The before — a unit in five places.
Property management is a per-unit business, and Coastline’s units were scattered. “Leasing in one system, maintenance in another, rent collection in a third, and owner reports built by hand,” says Tom Reyes, Principal. “Every month-end was a marathon of assembling owner statements from systems that didn’t reconcile.”
Maintenance was disconnected from the ledger, so a repair billed to an owner sometimes never made it onto their statement, and tenant requests fell through the cracks between apps.
$1,100/month across five tools. Hand-built owner statements monthly. Maintenance costs that didn’t reliably reach owner reports.
The switch — the unit becomes the record.
Coastline unified leasing, maintenance, rent, and owner reporting on the unit record and migrated its portfolio in tranches. Owner statements now generate from the same ledger that records rent and repairs.
“The first automated owner statement run saved us a literal week,” Reyes says. “And the numbers were right the first time.”
What got replaced
| Old tool | Replaced by Mewayz module | Monthly saving |
|---|---|---|
| Leasing software | Leasing & CRM | $280 |
| Maintenance ticket app | Maintenance & Work Orders | $180 |
| Rent collection tool | Payments & Rent | $180 |
| Owner report spreadsheets | Owner Reporting | $160 |
| Email / SMS tool | Tenant Communications | $100 |
| Total old stack | Mewayz Agency | save $1,100/mo |
The unlock — the portfolio reports itself.
With leasing, maintenance, rent, and reporting unified, the portfolio runs on one record:
- Owner statements generate from one ledger, automatically
- Maintenance costs post to the unit and the owner report
- Rent, late fees, and deposits settle to one record per unit
- Tenant requests and lease history live on the same unit
When rent and repairs post to the same ledger the owner statement reads, the statement is a generated report. The week of manual assembly each month simply disappeared.
The new normal — growth the portfolio can absorb.
“We took on another 120 units this year without adding back-office headcount,” Reyes says. “The per-unit overhead dropped enough that growth stopped scaring me. That’s the whole point of property management at scale.”