Key Takeaways
- HOA CC&Rs can ban short-term rentals even where city zoning explicitly allows them. Always request and read the full document stack before making an offer, not after closing.
- STR permit availability varies dramatically by city and neighborhood. Some markets have caps, closed waitlists, or bans on new registrations that sellers are not required to disclose.
- Seasonal demand swings are far sharper than most first-time buyers model. Even Gatlinburg, one of America’s most consistent year-round STR markets, sees a 2x revenue difference between its best and worst months.
- Utility costs at vacation properties routinely run 40 to 60 percent higher than comparable primary homes. Request twelve months of actual bills from the seller before closing.
- The hosts who recovered fastest from first-year shortfalls had done one thing differently: they researched the market with real data before buying, not after the closing paperwork was signed.
She found the property on a Thursday afternoon and fell in love by Thursday evening. A two-bedroom cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina. Stone fireplace. Wraparound deck. Views all the way to the ridge line where the clouds catch on the trees in autumn. She sent an offer by Friday morning and closed six weeks later.
Three weeks after getting the keys, the homeowners association sent a letter.
No rentals of fewer than thirty days. No exceptions. The restriction had been in the CC&Rs for eleven years. Her real estate agent had not thought to ask for the HOA documents. She had not known such documents existed, let alone what to look for in them.
“Fue un golpe muy duro,” she told me, months after she had worked through it. A very hard blow. She eventually sold the property at a modest loss, absorbed the transaction costs, and bought a different cabin two counties over. On that second property, she verified the HOA language before she ever made an offer. The cabin earned $74,000 in its first full year.
Her story is one version of a pattern I have heard repeated from first-time STR buyers in markets across the country. Smart, motivated buyers who missed one specific detail during due diligence, paid for it, and came out the other side more careful and more successful than many investors who simply got lucky on the first deal. These are their lessons.
The due diligence process for a vacation rental is not the same checklist you use for a primary residence or a long-term rental. There are STR-specific tripwires that most general real estate agents do not know to flag. The items below come from real host situations. Some details have been changed to protect privacy, but the mistakes are real. So are the recoveries.
1. The HOA and CC&R Document Stack
The Blue Ridge cabin story above is the most common expensive mistake I hear from first-time STR buyers. An HOA can legally prohibit short-term rentals even in a city or county that has passed ordinances explicitly permitting them. Municipal zoning sets the floor. HOA CC&Rs set the ceiling for what you can do with your property. The HOA wins.
Before making any offer on a property inside an HOA or condominium association, request:
- The full CC&Rs with all amendments
- Current bylaws
- Any board resolutions passed since the CC&Rs were adopted
- Meeting minutes from the past 12 to 24 months
- The association’s current rental policy documentation
When you have those documents, search specifically for the words “lease,” “rental,” “transient,” “short-term,” “guest,” and “commercial use.” Restrictions sometimes appear in unexpected sections. A provision buried inside an architectural review clause derailed a purchase for a host I spoke with in Scottsdale. He caught it in time because he had asked for the meeting minutes and a board member had mentioned a rental restriction discussion from six months earlier.
One distinction worth understanding: some HOA rental restrictions sit inside the CC&Rs themselves, which require a supermajority member vote to change. Others exist only in board resolutions, which are easier to pass and, in theory, easier to reverse. A board-resolution restriction is less stable, but that flexibility cuts both directions. The board that restricted rentals five years ago could also add a new restriction next year.
If you are buying inside a condominium building, also ask: how many units currently operate as short-term rentals, and is there a building-level cap? Some associations permit STRs up to a percentage of total units. If the cap is nearly full, you may be buying into a waitlist position before you list your first night.
2. Permit Availability and Whether New Registrations Are Even Open
Let’s call him Daniel. He spent nine months finding the right property in a popular desert market in Southern California. He ran the income projections, confirmed the city had an STR permit program, and closed. Then he applied for his permit and discovered the neighborhood had already hit its density cap. The city stops issuing new vacation rental certificates when STR listings reach twenty percent of dwelling units in a given neighborhood. He was on a waitlist with no confirmed timeline.
He managed the property as a monthly rental for fourteen months while he waited. A permit eventually opened. He is now one of the highest-rated hosts in that market. But fourteen months of monthly rental income instead of short-term rental revenue was not in his financial model, and the gap hurt.
Cities across the country have implemented permit caps, closed waitlists, and registration moratoriums. San Diego’s Tier 4 license category for whole-home rentals in Mission Beach currently has zero available licenses, with the waitlist closed and no confirmed reopening date. Aspen issues STR permits in certain zone districts in limited quantities, subject to public notice and waitlist procedures. Palm Springs enforces density caps at the neighborhood level. Desert Hot Springs closes its application period when the citywide four percent cap is reached.
Before going under contract on any vacation rental property in a regulated market, call the permitting office directly. Do not rely on your agent’s general read of the regulatory environment. Ask three specific questions: Is new permit issuance currently open in this specific zone or neighborhood? Does an existing permit on the property transfer to a new owner? Has there been any discussion of a moratorium or cap change in the past twelve months?
The StaySTRA analyzer tracks regulatory data for hundreds of markets, which is a useful starting point for understanding the permit landscape before you pick up the phone. Use it alongside direct research with the local permitting office.
3. Seasonal Demand: The Full Twelve-Month Picture
A couple from Atlanta, call them the Marshalls, bought a beach house on the Alabama Gulf Coast and projected their annual income based on the months they had personally visited the area. July. August. A long weekend in June. They assumed the rest of the year would be softer but expected shoulder seasons to keep the property cash-flowing.
They did not model November through March with any seriousness. Those five months, more than forty percent of the year, generated roughly twelve percent of their total first-year revenue. The property sat empty for stretches that felt very long when the mortgage payment was due.
They are two years into ownership now and have made real progress. Smarter off-season pricing. Targeting remote workers for two-week stays in February. Adding a fire pit that changed the feel of the outdoor space for cooler months. The property is working. But year one was a financial education they had not anticipated.
Seasonal variance shows up even in markets known for consistent demand. StaySTRA data for Gatlinburg, Tennessee, one of America’s most consistent STR markets with over twelve million annual visitors to Great Smoky Mountains National Park, shows average property revenue of $7,566 in July compared to $3,861 in January. That is nearly a two-to-one swing in the same market, in the same year. A beach market with a genuine winter off-season can produce swings of four to one or worse.
Before buying, pull actual monthly revenue data for comparable active properties in that market. The StaySTRA analyzer shows month-by-month demand patterns so you can model all twelve months, not just the peak ones. For a broader view of which markets show the strongest and most consistent year-round fundamentals, the StaySTRA 2026 market rankings break down occupancy and ADR by season across the top investment markets nationwide.
4. Utility Costs in Vacation Markets
Vacation properties in mountain and beach markets often carry utility bills that first-time buyers never factor into their projections. The combination of dramatic climate swings, older HVAC systems, higher square footage than a typical primary home, and guests who run the air conditioning at sixty-eight degrees around the clock without caring about the bill can produce monthly statements that quietly destroy a pro forma.
A host in the Smoky Mountains, an experienced investor who had owned long-term rental properties in a flat-climate market for a decade before buying his first cabin, told me he had no mental framework for what utilities would cost at a vacation property in the mountains. His first full summer, the electric bill for a three-bedroom cabin hit $580 in July. His model had assumed $200 a month, averaged across the year, based on his experience managing residential units in a mild climate.
“Nunca lo vi venir,” he said. I never saw it coming. He has since installed a smart thermostat with guest-mode controls that prevent setting the thermostat below 68 or above 78 degrees, added attic insulation, and replaced two aging window units with a mini-split system. Utilities are manageable now. But that first year’s operating costs were several thousand dollars above what he had projected.
What to request during due diligence: twelve months of actual utility bills from the current owner. Not an average. Not an estimate. Actual statements. If the seller only used the property personally and not as a full-time rental, understand that guest usage typically runs higher than owner usage. Also ask specifically about any propane or oil delivery costs, which can be substantial in mountain markets not served by natural gas. And get a quote from an HVAC contractor on the age and condition of all heating and cooling equipment before you close.
5. The Noise and Neighbor Situation
Noise complaints are among the top causes of one-star reviews, and some noise problems are property-selection problems, not management problems. There is nothing a host can do about the bar two doors down that runs live music until 1:30 in the morning on weekend nights, or the neighbor who runs landscaping equipment at 7 a.m., or the proximity to a highway that no white noise machine can mask.
A host in a Tennessee college town purchased a property that had performed well as a rental under its previous owner. The prior owner had listed it only on fall football weekends. When she began running it as a full-time STR and guests arrived on Tuesday nights in January, the complaints started. The apartment complex directly behind the property ran its commercial HVAC condensers at a volume that guests described in reviews as a “relentless mechanical hum.” The prior owner had rented only in cool-weather months when those condensers were mostly idle.
The reviews cost her real money in search visibility. She eventually solved a portion of the problem by adding thick curtains, a white noise machine in the bedroom, and a rewritten listing description that honestly set expectations for an urban location. But the noise from the compressors was structural, baked into the property’s location, and no amount of management skill would fully resolve it.
What to do before buying: visit the property at different times. Come back on a Friday or Saturday night. Walk the street at 10 p.m. Talk to immediate neighbors. Ask them, genuinely, what the neighborhood is like to live in at night and on weekends. Neighbors will tell you things no inspection report covers. Also check the property address against local noise ordinance complaint records, which many cities now publish online.
6. Parking Reality
It sounds like a minor detail. It shows up in reviews with remarkable regularity.
A host on the Gulf Coast bought a three-bedroom house that could sleep eight guests comfortably. The driveway held one car. Street parking in the neighborhood operated under a residential permit system during peak season, which applied only to residents and not to guests. Families arriving with two vehicles had nowhere legal to park within comfortable walking distance.
The reviews began within the first month. “Parking situation was completely unmanageable.” “Had to park far away and pay daily fees.” “Not mentioned anywhere in the listing.” The property’s overall rating slipped from 4.9 to 4.2 over four months. At 4.2, Airbnb’s algorithm reduces visibility in search results, which made the booking problem compound on itself.
She has since been transparent in her listing description, added a guest FAQ that explains the parking situation clearly, and adjusted her pricing to reflect a smaller target guest count. Revenue is lower than her original projections, but reviews are stable. The parking situation itself has not changed, because it cannot.
Before buying: count actual usable parking spaces, not what the listing claims. Verify whether HOA rules restrict guest vehicle parking. Confirm whether street parking requires a residential permit, particularly in beach and resort markets where seasonal restrictions are common. As a practical rule of thumb, a property marketed to six or more guests needs at least two to three dedicated spots to avoid the review consequences that parking complaints produce.
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7. Cell Signal and WiFi Infrastructure
In remote mountain markets, lake communities, and rural vacation destinations, cell service is genuinely unreliable and the infrastructure to deliver high-speed internet may simply not reach the property. This is easy to overlook during a daytime showing and painful to discover after the first guests check in.
A host named Marcus bought a lakefront cabin in a popular Ozarks vacation area specifically intending to attract remote workers and longer-stay guests. He listed it with “high-speed wifi” based on the seller’s description and did not personally test the connection before closing. The actual speeds, delivered by the only available rural broadband provider, peaked at 8 Mbps download on a good day. One video call worked. Two people on separate calls simultaneously did not.
His first three guest groups mentioned the wifi in their reviews. He solved the problem by switching to Starlink, which transformed the property’s connectivity from unusable to excellent. He now manages the cabin remotely with the help of Guesty for reservations, automated guest messaging, and cleaning coordination, which works smoothly now that the infrastructure issues are resolved. But Starlink requires clear line-of-sight to the southern sky, and his cabin lot has mature trees that blocked the dish from every position except one corner where he had to negotiate with a neighbor about trimming branches. None of that was in his pre-close inspection.
What to do before buying a remote property: bring your phone from each major carrier and run a speed test on-site. Check coverage maps from Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile for that specific address. If the property has existing wifi service, ask the seller for speed test screenshots from the past thirty days. If you plan to install Starlink, identify the dish placement location during your inspection visit and confirm clear sky view before you close. Check whether any fiber or fixed wireless providers are expanding to the area in the next 12 to 24 months, which affects your cost structure and your competitive position in the market.
8. The First-Year Ramp-Up Reality
Even when a buyer gets every structural detail right, the first year is almost always the hardest financially. New STR listings start without reviews, which affects algorithmic placement on Airbnb and VRBO. Both platforms weight review history heavily in search rankings. A fresh listing competes against established properties with hundreds of reviews and years of Superhost status, and it starts at a disadvantage that takes months to close.
Industry research and experienced host accounts consistently suggest that new STR listings need six to twelve months before occupancy and ADR stabilize near market averages. Buyers who model year-one income at full market-rate performance, based on what comparable properties with established reputations earn, will almost always be disappointed by the results.
The correct approach is to build a ramp period into the pro forma. Model year one at 70 percent of the market median. Model year two at 90 percent. Model year three at full potential. Then stress-test the deal at each level and ask whether the investment works even in the conservative year-one scenario. If it does not, the deal may be underwritten too aggressively for the actual risk profile of a new listing entering an established market.
Hosts who bought properties with an existing rental history and a strong review profile paid a premium. In most cases it was worth it. A listing with four years of reviews and a 4.9 rating starts with a competitive advantage that a new listing will spend at least a year approaching.
What the Hosts Who Got It Right Did Before Buying
Every experienced STR investor I spoke with who made a successful first purchase described a similar pre-close process. They researched the market before they chose the market. They pulled actual monthly revenue data for comparable active listings. They looked at seasonal patterns, not just peak-season headlines. They ran their numbers against a conservative occupancy scenario, not the seller’s optimistic projections.
The StaySTRA analyzer is built for exactly this phase of the process. It shows ADR and occupancy benchmarks by property type and bedroom count, seasonal demand curves by month, and revenue estimates grounded in actual market performance rather than hypothetical scenarios. Pair that research with the financing picture, which our STR financing guide for 2026 covers in detail including DSCR loan options that qualify based on the property’s rental income rather than your personal W-2, and you have the analytical foundation to avoid the most common and most expensive first-time buyer mistakes.
The hosts who shared their stories with me for this piece almost universally said the same thing when I asked what they would do differently: more research before the offer, less reliance on the seller’s representations, and a deeper understanding of the market they were buying into before they fell in love with any specific property.
Como dicen: el que no sabe, que aprenda. The best time to learn is before the ink dries on the contract. The second best time is right now, before the next offer goes in.
We do our best to keep our content accurate and up to date, but things change and we are only human. Always verify details directly with local sources, HOA management companies, and permitting offices before making purchasing decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most common mistake first-time vacation rental buyers make?
Failing to review the HOA’s CC&Rs before closing is the single most common and most costly mistake. An HOA can legally prohibit short-term rentals even in cities or counties where STRs are fully permitted by local ordinance. The HOA’s governing documents take precedence over what you can do inside an association-governed property. Always request and read the full CC&Rs, bylaws, and any board resolutions before making an offer, not after going under contract.
How do I check if STR permits are available in the market I want to buy in?
Call the city or county permitting office directly and ask three questions: Is new permit issuance currently open in the specific zone or neighborhood? Does an existing STR permit on the property transfer to a new owner? Has there been any recent discussion of a cap or moratorium? Cities like San Diego, Palm Springs, and Aspen have complex, neighborhood-level permit systems that can close quickly. The StaySTRA analyzer also tracks regulatory status for major markets as a starting point.
How much should I budget for utilities at a vacation rental property?
Budget $400 to $800 per month as a starting range for a full house in a mountain or beach market, depending on climate, square footage, and HVAC system age. Request twelve months of actual utility statements from the seller during due diligence. If the seller only used the property personally, understand that guest usage runs higher than owner usage since guests run heating and cooling continuously without concern for the bill. Also ask about propane or oil delivery costs in mountain markets not served by natural gas lines.
What should I look for in parking when evaluating a vacation rental property?
Count the actual usable parking spaces at the property. Verify whether HOA rules restrict guest vehicle parking. Confirm whether street parking in the area requires a residential permit, particularly in beach and resort markets with seasonal restrictions. As a practical rule, a property marketed to six or more guests needs at least two to three dedicated parking spots to avoid the review consequences that parking problems consistently produce.
How long does it take a new vacation rental listing to reach full performance?
New STR listings typically need six to twelve months to reach occupancy and ADR levels comparable to established properties in the same market. During the ramp-up period, new listings have no reviews and lower visibility in the Airbnb and VRBO algorithms. Build a conservative ramp period into your financial projections, modeling year one at roughly 70 percent of the market median and growing toward full potential over years two and three. Buying a property with an existing rental history and strong reviews can significantly shorten this ramp period.
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