Market selection is the most important decision in STR investing. A great property in the wrong market will underperform, while an average property in the right market can thrive. This guide teaches you to evaluate markets like a professional investor.
Understanding Market Types
Different market types have distinct characteristics:
| Market Type | Seasonality | Avg. Stay | ADR Potential |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beach | High (summer peak) | 5-7 nights | High |
| Mountain/Ski | High (winter + summer) | 4-6 nights | Very High |
| Urban | Low (year-round) | 2-3 nights | Medium-High |
| Lake | High (summer peak) | 5-7 nights | Medium-High |
| Desert/Golf | Medium (winter peak) | 4-7 nights | Medium |
Key Market Metrics
Evaluate every potential market using these core metrics:
Revenue Metrics
- ADR (Average Daily Rate): Average nightly rate across the market
- Occupancy Rate: Percentage of nights booked (aim for 55%+ annual average)
- RevPAR: Revenue per available night (ADR x Occupancy) - the single most important metric
Market Health Indicators
- YoY Revenue Growth: Is the market growing or shrinking?
- Supply Growth: Are new listings flooding the market?
- Demand Growth: Is traveler demand keeping pace with supply?
Analyzing Demand Drivers
What brings travelers to this market? Strong markets have multiple demand drivers:
- Tourism attractions: National parks, beaches, ski resorts, theme parks
- Events: Festivals, conferences, sports events
- Business travel: Corporate headquarters, convention centers
- Regional drives: "Within 3-hour drive" markets for weekend getaways
- Airport access: Major airport nearby for destination travelers
The best markets have multiple demand drivers. A beach town with good restaurants, local events, AND golf courses will outperform one that's beach-only.
Regulatory Analysis
Regulations can make or break an STR market. Research these BEFORE making any offer:
Regulation Checklist
- Are STR permits required? What's the cost?
- Is there a permit cap or lottery system?
- Zoning restrictions - where are STRs allowed?
- Occupancy taxes - what rate and who collects?
- Safety requirements (fire, egress, insurance)?
- Pending legislation that could change rules?
Don't rely on online summaries for regulations - call the local planning department directly. Rules change frequently and online information is often outdated.
Competition Analysis
Understanding your competition helps you position for success:
- Count active listings - How many similar properties compete in your target area?
- Analyze top performers - What do the highest-rated, most-booked listings have?
- Identify gaps - What's undersupplied? (Pet-friendly? Hot tubs? Large groups?)
- Study pricing patterns - How do rates vary by season, day of week?
- Read reviews - What do guests love? What do they complain about?
Red Flags to Avoid
- Declining RevPAR: Market is shrinking or oversaturated
- Supply outpacing demand: Too many new listings chasing same guests
- Regulatory uncertainty: Pending bans or major restrictions
- Single demand driver: One factory closing or event canceling crashes the market
- Declining tourism: Aging attractions, environmental issues, safety concerns
Research Tools
- AirDNA: Comprehensive STR market data and analytics ($20-500/month)
- Mashvisor: Property-level analysis and ROI estimates
- AllTheRooms: Alternative data source for validation
- Airbnb/VRBO search: Free - study listings, pricing, calendars directly
- Google Trends: Search interest for "[city] vacation rentals"
- Local tourism boards: Visitor statistics and trend reports
Visit the market before buying. Stay in an STR, talk to local operators, and experience it as a guest. No amount of data replaces boots-on-the-ground research.