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  3. Austin STR Market 2026. What the Data Shows for Investors in Texas’s Most Watched Short-Term Rental Market

Austin STR Market 2026. What the Data Shows for Investors in Texas’s Most Watched Short-Term Rental Market

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Edna Stewart
March 26, 2026 11 min read
Austin Texas skyline representing the short-term rental market in 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Austin’s short-term rental market supports 14,659 active listings with a 57.7% LTM occupancy rate and $225 average daily rate, generating $2,794 in average monthly revenue per listing.
  • March (SXSW) is the market’s peak month at $3,663 in monthly revenue, while October (ACL) delivers the highest ADR at $253 per night.
  • Austin’s regulatory framework caps non-owner-occupied STRs at 10% of units in multifamily buildings and requires 1,000-foot separation for single-family operators running multiple properties.
  • Compared to Nashville ($5,023/month, 61.3% occupancy) and Denver ($2,833/month, 72.4% occupancy), Austin sits in the middle on revenue but carries significantly more supply at 14,659 listings.
  • New platform enforcement rules taking effect July 1, 2026 will require Airbnb and Vrbo to display license status and remove unlicensed listings on city request.

Austin’s short-term rental market generated $2,794 in average monthly revenue per listing over the last twelve months, spread across 14,659 active properties pulling a 57.7% occupancy rate. Think of that occupancy figure like a batting average: a .577 hitter is getting on base more often than not, but there is room to sharpen the swing. For a market that draws 30 million visitors a year and hosts some of the biggest events on the American calendar, those numbers tell a story that is both encouraging and more nuanced than the headlines suggest.

I have been tracking STR markets long enough to know that Austin is the city everyone asks about first. The tech economy, the culture, the events. It carries a reputation that runs ahead of its actual numbers in some respects and behind them in others. StaySTRA data gives us a clear look at where this market stands heading into 2026, and I want to walk you through what the numbers reveal for investors considering an entry (or existing hosts measuring their performance against the field).

Austin STR Market Performance by the Numbers

Let’s start with the core metrics. StaySTRA tracks 14,659 active short-term rental listings in Austin, making it one of the largest STR markets in the country by supply volume alone.

Last-Twelve-Months Overview:

  • ADR: $225.00
  • Occupancy Rate: 57.7%
  • RevPAR: $112.74
  • Average Monthly Revenue: $2,794
  • Active Listings: 14,659

That $225 ADR is solid for a mid-tier Sun Belt market, though it sits below what you will find in resort-driven destinations or luxury-heavy metros. The 57.7% occupancy rate tells you Austin fills its rooms consistently, even with a supply base approaching 15,000 units. Not every listing is booked every night (very few markets achieve that), but more than half the available nights are generating revenue across the year.

The Monthly Revenue Calendar: Where the Spikes Live

Austin’s revenue pattern is shaped almost entirely by its event calendar. If you have spent any time looking at STR data, you know that most markets have a “high season.” Austin has three of them, packed into distinct months that create a revenue curve unlike almost any other U.S. city.

Here is the monthly breakdown from StaySTRA data:

Month ADR Occupancy Monthly Revenue
March (SXSW) $240 67.7% $3,663
October (ACL) $253 59.1% $3,461
November (F1) $223 57.1% $2,898
April $225 58.6% $2,973
May $221 57.1% $2,857
July $201 57.1% $2,562
February $210 57.1% $2,509
June $201 56.5% $2,510
September $209 50.0% $2,394
December $198 50.0% $2,262
August $201 50.0% $2,196
January $195 46.7% $2,015

March is the clear winner, pulling $3,663 in average monthly revenue on the back of SXSW. That festival brings over 200,000 attendees, and properties within a few miles of downtown routinely command rates two to three times their normal nightly price. The 67.7% occupancy rate for March is the highest of any month, nearly 21 percentage points above January’s trough.

October delivers the highest ADR of the year at $253 per night, driven by Austin City Limits. ACL spans two weekends and draws over 450,000 music fans. Properties near Zilker Park see three-night minimum stays and rates that run 50% to 100% above standard pricing. Don’t let the lower occupancy rate fool you here. Hosts in well-positioned neighborhoods are booked solid during both ACL weekends; the lower market-wide number reflects the fact that not every listing captures that event demand equally.

November brings the Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas. The F1 weekend pushes ADR above $223 and sustains occupancy through what would otherwise be the start of the slow season.

Stay with me on the math here. The gap between the best month (March at $3,663) and the worst (January at $2,015) is $1,648. That is an 82% premium from peak to trough. For investors modeling cash flow, this seasonal swing means your annual projections cannot rely on a single monthly average. You need to account for the event-driven peaks and the January-through-February valley.

Austin’s Regulatory Framework: Type 1, Type 2, and What Investors Must Know

This is where Austin gets interesting for investors, and where I have seen the most confusion when people call asking about the market. Austin uses a tiered licensing system that directly affects whether you can operate a non-owner-occupied rental property.

Type 1 STR: An owner-occupied short-term rental. You live in the home (or on the same property) and rent part or all of it for stays under 30 days. These are available in all residential zoning districts.

Type 2 STR: A non-owner-occupied short-term rental. The owner does not live on the property. This is the license type that matters most for investors. These are now permitted in all residential zoning districts as an accessory use (as of February 2025), but they come with density limits.

Type 3 STR: A commercial short-term rental operation, typically in commercial zoning districts. Longer processing times (8 to 10 weeks for initial applications).

Here is what the density rules look like in practice:

  • Single-family properties: An operator may run up to two STR units on a single site. Additional STRs elsewhere must be at least 1,000 feet apart.
  • Multifamily residential: STR licenses capped at 10% of units (or one unit, whichever is greater).
  • Mixed-use buildings: Capped at 25% of units (or one unit, whichever is greater), and the building must have four or more residential units plus a commercial use.

The 1,000-foot separation rule is the one that catches investors off guard. Think of it like a chess move: you can place a second piece on the same square, but your third piece needs to be on a completely different part of the board. This limits the kind of portfolio clustering that works in unrestricted markets.

What Changed in 2025 (and What Is Coming in 2026)

Austin’s regulatory landscape shifted significantly over the past year. In February 2025, the city expanded STR eligibility to all residential zoning districts with a valid license. Then in October 2025, several more changes took effect:

  • License validity extended from one year to two years
  • Certificate of Occupancy and insurance requirements removed for new applicants
  • Tenant operators now permitted (with landlord written consent)
  • The geographic separation rule (1,000 feet) was codified
  • Neighbor notification required at every renewal

The big date on the horizon is July 1, 2026. Starting that day, platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo must display license status on listings and honor city requests to remove unlicensed operators. This is a meaningful enforcement mechanism. Cities that rely on complaint-based enforcement have historically struggled to manage STR compliance. Austin is moving toward platform-level accountability, which should thin out unlicensed competition over time.

License fees run $836.30 for new applications and $385.30 for renewals. Not cheap, but not prohibitive either. Every operator must designate a local contact who lives in the Austin metro area (Travis, Williamson, Hays, Bastrop, or Caldwell County) and can respond to emergencies within two hours.

What Austin’s Supply Looks Like: 14,659 Listings by Bedroom Count

Understanding the composition of Austin’s supply helps investors identify where competition is thickest and where gaps might exist.

Property Type Listings Share of Market
Studio 601 4.1%
1-Bedroom 3,269 22.3%
2-Bedroom 2,611 17.8%
3-Bedroom 2,065 14.1%
4-Bedroom 1,193 8.1%
5+ Bedroom 830 5.7%

One-bedroom units dominate at 22.3% of the market. That makes sense for a city where a large share of visitor demand comes from business travelers, conference attendees, and solo travelers visiting during tech and music events. The 5+ bedroom segment (830 listings) is where group bookings and event-weekend demand tend to concentrate, and where ADR premiums run highest during SXSW and ACL. If you are looking at a larger property purchase, that 5.7% market share represents less competition per listing than the crowded one-bedroom segment.

How Austin Compares to Nashville and Denver

Investors often evaluate Austin alongside other high-profile STR markets. We published deep dives on Nashville (March 22) and Denver (March 24), and the comparison reveals where Austin fits in the spectrum.

Metric Austin Nashville Denver
Active Listings 14,659 12,006 3,400+
LTM ADR $225 $301 $192
LTM Occupancy 57.7% 61.3% 72.4%
Monthly Revenue $2,794 $5,023 $2,833
RevPAR $112.74 ~$184 ~$139

Nashville leads on raw revenue, pulling nearly double Austin’s monthly average on the strength of a $301 ADR. But Nashville also has higher property values ($426,125 typical) and a tighter regulatory environment with its own permit system. Denver beats Austin on occupancy by almost 15 percentage points, partly because Denver’s primary residence requirement limits supply to roughly 3,400 active listings, a fraction of Austin’s nearly 15,000.

Austin’s story is one of volume and accessibility. It has the largest supply base of the three, the lowest barrier to entry from a licensing perspective (especially post-February 2025 expansion), and a triple-event revenue calendar that no other market in this comparison can match. The trade-off is thinner margins per listing due to that larger supply pool.

From my desk in Santa Fe, I have watched all three of these markets evolve over the past decade, and each one rewards a different kind of investor. Nashville favors operators who can command premium nightly rates. Denver rewards patience and the ability to navigate a primary-residence gate. Austin? Austin rewards hosts who understand event-driven pricing and can capture those three peak periods where the real money lives.

What Investors Should Watch Going Forward

Three factors will shape Austin’s STR investment landscape through the rest of 2026:

1. July 1 platform enforcement. When Airbnb and Vrbo begin displaying license status and removing unlicensed listings, the effective supply should contract. Licensed operators who are already compliant will benefit from reduced competition. If you are buying into this market, make sure your property and license are buttoned up before that date.

2. Event calendar stability. Austin’s three anchor events (SXSW in March, ACL in October, F1 in November) remain confirmed for 2026. These events are the revenue engine that separates Austin from markets with similar baseline occupancy. Any disruption to the event calendar would ripple through STR performance immediately.

3. Supply growth versus demand. With 14,659 active listings, Austin is already one of the most supplied STR markets in Texas. The February 2025 zoning expansion opened new residential districts to STR licensing. Whether that translates to meaningful supply growth or gets absorbed by the July enforcement cleanup remains to be seen.

Data note: StaySTRA market data reflects approximately November 2025 figures due to a data pipeline update in progress. We do our best to keep our data accurate and up to date, but markets move fast and we are only human. Always verify current figures directly with local sources before making investment decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average Airbnb revenue in Austin, Texas in 2026?

StaySTRA data shows the average Austin short-term rental generates approximately $2,794 per month in revenue, based on a last-twelve-months average. Peak months like March (SXSW) can reach $3,663, while January typically dips to around $2,015. Annual revenue for a typical Austin STR listing runs approximately $33,500.

Do you need a permit for a short-term rental in Austin?

Yes. Austin requires an STR license for all short-term rentals within its full-purpose jurisdiction. There are three license types: Type 1 (owner-occupied), Type 2 (non-owner-occupied), and Type 3 (commercial). Starting July 1, 2026, platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo will be required to display license status and can be asked to remove unlicensed listings. New license fees are $836.30.

What is the occupancy rate for short-term rentals in Austin?

Austin’s LTM occupancy rate is 57.7% across 14,659 active listings. This rate varies significantly by month, from a high of 67.7% in March (driven by SXSW) to a low of 46.7% in January. Properties in central Austin near event venues tend to outperform the market average during peak periods.

How do Austin STR regulations affect investors in 2026?

Austin expanded STR eligibility to all residential zoning districts in February 2025, but density limits apply. Non-owner-occupied (Type 2) operators running multiple properties must keep them at least 1,000 feet apart. Multifamily buildings cap STR units at 10%. The October 2025 changes removed insurance and Certificate of Occupancy requirements, making licensing somewhat easier for new entrants.

Is Austin a good market for short-term rental investment in 2026?

Austin offers a unique combination of high visitor volume (30 million annually), a triple-event revenue calendar (SXSW, ACL, F1), and a large but increasingly regulated market. The $2,794 monthly revenue average sits between Denver ($2,833) and Nashville ($5,023) among recently analyzed markets. The key differentiator is event-driven pricing: hosts who capture the March, October, and November peaks can significantly outperform the averages.

Run the Numbers for Your Austin Property

Every market looks different at the property level. A one-bedroom near downtown and a four-bedroom in South Austin will have completely different revenue profiles, even in the same city. Use the StaySTRA Austin Analyzer to plug in a specific address and see projected revenue, occupancy, and comparables based on real listing data. You can also explore the full Austin STR market page for the latest metrics.

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Edna Stewart

Edna Stewart

Senior Data Analyst & Research Editor

I've spent nearly four decades turning numbers into stories. These days I focus on STR market data, occupancy trends, and revenue analysis, always looking for what the figures actually mean for hosts and their communities.

Writes about: Data Localities STR Market Data STR Buying Hot Topics
52 articles · Writing since Apr 2025
Previous Article New York Cities Can Now Demand Quarterly Reports from Airbnb and Vrbo. Here Is What Gets Reported. Next Article Indiana Just Banned Cities from Capping Short-Term Rentals. Here Is What HEA 1210 Actually Does.

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