

Short-Term Rental Arbitrage

In the realm of short-term rentals, arbitrage is using someone else’s asset to make money. For short-term rentals, an arbitrage involves renting a property in a prime short-term rental location with the understanding that you’ll be subleasing the property as a short-term rental on sites like Airbnb and Vrbo. Generally, an arbitrage involves a long-term lease that is then sublet for a profit. The profit comes in the spread between the cost of monthly rent for the property and the income the property brings in monthly as a short-term rental.
Probably use a business entity for any arbitrage endeavors. With this type of arrangement, you’re working with so many different parties that you end up facing liability on each side. By this, you face liability with the short-term rental guests if anything happens, like a trip and fall but you also face liability with the property owner if the guests cause property damage. So, you want to be careful about the way you go about these types of deals. Critical to the success of short-term rental arbitrage is ensuring that the master lease agreement allows for subleases. That being said, some people find success with short-term rental arbitrage, especially people who don’t have properties they own to let out as short-term rentals themselves. Most of the trainers out there who teach Airbnb arbitrage recommend overpaying the monthly rent so that you and the homeowner both benefit from the arrangement but be careful as you need to make sure there’s enough profit spread in there. This can be the downfall of short-term rental arbitrage endeavors.
When you begin to look into property management for short-term rentals, you often hear that it eats up a ton of the profit. The industry has gotten wise to the time and effort it takes to manage short-term rentals as compared to long-term rentals, and we’ve seen an increase in costs come with that. It’s not uncommon to see property management contracts for short-term rentals up into the range of 40-50% of gross rents. This may not be quite as much of an issue in the arbitrage arena since many folks who arbitrage properties also manage the properties themselves.
Overall, short-term rental arbitrage can be a more accessible way to get into real estate investing, but it’s important to calculate the numbers carefully.
Topics: Rent, Arbitrage, Investment
Work cited: Carl Zoellner, July 01, 2020
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