Key Takeaways
- STR buyers are investors evaluating income metrics on the first call, not residential home buyers asking about school districts.
- A prepared listing agent has the trailing 12-month P&L, permit transferability status, ADR, occupancy, and conveyance list assembled before going live.
- In most U.S. jurisdictions, STR permits do not transfer to a new owner automatically; the buyer must apply for a new permit under current rules.
- Airbnb and VRBO do not allow listing transfers between accounts; future bookings require a co-host arrangement or cancellation and rebooking strategy negotiated before closing.
- Answering every buyer question without saying “let me check” is how listing agents earn the commission on an STR sale.
The call comes in at 10 a.m. on a Tuesday. The buyer is an investor based in Denver, looking at your Scottsdale listing. He has done this before. You can tell because his first question is not about the square footage.
“What did it gross last year? What was net after management?”
If you are reaching for your phone to text the seller, you have already lost half the room. STR buyers are not residential buyers who got curious about vacation rentals. They are underwriting a business acquisition on the first call, and they expect the listing agent to have the data. The agents who have it close deals. The agents who don’t spend three days playing phone tag and lose the buyer to someone more prepared.
This is the deep dive on that first call. If you want the full picture of how to prep an STR listing from start to finish, start with the listing-agent playbook. This post is about the eight questions that come before the showing.
Question 1: What Did It Gross Last Year? What Was Net?
This is always first. Every STR investor wants the trailing 12-month income statement, called a T12. Not a printout from Airbnb’s earnings summary. A real P&L that shows gross revenue on one line and a clean breakdown of expenses below it: platform fees, management fees, cleaning costs, supplies, utilities, maintenance, and insurance.
The difference between gross and net is where deals get priced. A property generating $95,000 gross sounds different from one netting $47,000 after a 20% management fee, $12,000 in cleaning, and $8,000 in maintenance. Both numbers are accurate. A prepared agent presents both without the buyer having to ask twice.
If the seller has been self-managing and never produced a formal P&L, get one made before you go live. A one-page spreadsheet with twelve months of line items is acceptable. A verbal estimate is not. I have seen buyers walk away from otherwise solid properties simply because the agent could not produce documented income. They assume the worst when the paper trail is missing.
Question 2: What Is the Occupancy and ADR?
Occupancy rate (what percentage of available nights were booked) and average daily rate (ADR, what guests actually paid per night) are the two metrics every STR investor uses to validate the income story and compare this property to market alternatives.
Pull the property’s actual platform data from the seller. Then run market comps through the StaySTRA Analyzer, which pulls real performance data from comparable active listings in the submarket. When I was managing portfolios across Scottsdale and the Phoenix metro, having market-level ADR and occupancy benchmarks was the difference between defending a price and explaining it. Buyers will cross-check your numbers. If the property is running 72% occupancy while the market average for similar properties sits at 58%, that is a real selling point worth leading with. If it is running below market, you need to explain why before the buyer asks.
The StaySTRA data also shows seasonal demand curves, which matters when a buyer is projecting forward cash flows rather than just reading last year’s tax return.
Question 3: Is the Permit Current, and Does It Transfer to Me?
This is the question that trips up the most agents, including agents who do this regularly. The answer in most U.S. markets is: the permit does not automatically transfer. The buyer must apply for a new permit under current rules, which may differ significantly from the rules under which the seller originally received approval.
Newport Beach, California is explicit about this: STR permits are issued to the property owner and do not convey with a sale. The buyer applies fresh, subject to current zone caps. San Antonio has the same hard rule. So do Austin, San Diego, and Houston. In markets where permit caps exist, a property without a guarantee of permit approval is a meaningfully different investment than one in an uncapped jurisdiction.
A prepared listing agent has already confirmed: (1) the permit is current and not in violation, (2) the jurisdiction’s explicit policy on transferability, and (3) whether there are pending local ordinance changes that could affect approval. Yes, I read the relevant municipal code sections before listing. Someone has to.
If you cannot answer this question cold on the first call, the buyer will wonder what else you have not checked.
Question 4: Are There Future Bookings, and Do They Convey?
STR investors buying a running business want to know what revenue is already on the calendar for the months after closing. The answer requires some nuance because Airbnb and VRBO do not allow listing transfers between accounts. There is no mechanism to hand a listing to a new owner. Future bookings on the old account are attached to the old host.
The standard solution is the co-host arrangement: add the new owner as a co-host on the existing listing before closing, so they can manage bookings through the transition under the seller’s account while building their own listing in parallel. This process works best when initiated 30 to 45 days before close. If a buyer is under contract with a 21-day close timeline and nobody has started the co-host setup, that revenue on the calendar is at risk.
The listing agent should also know the current deposit situation. Guests who booked months in advance have paid deposits the seller is holding. If those bookings are going to be honored post-close, that liability needs to be addressed in the purchase agreement. If they are going to be canceled, the seller handles the refunds before close. Neither option is wrong, but the buyer needs to know which path before they sign.
Question 5: What Conveys? Is It Turnkey?
“Turnkey” is a word that means different things to different sellers. To a serious STR buyer, it means the property is operational day one: furniture, linens, towels, kitchen supplies, smart locks, noise monitors, WiFi equipment, cleaning supplies, and access to all software accounts (channel manager, dynamic pricing tool, keypad codes). If the seller is taking the 65-inch TV and leaving mismatched patio furniture, that is not turnkey. It is a negotiating point.
Prepare a written conveyance list before you go live. Every item that stays, listed by room. This avoids the post-inspection argument about whether the Ring doorbell was included in the sale. Buyers who are financing the purchase through DSCR loans (a common approach for STR investors) need to know what they are actually acquiring for the price they are paying. A gap between “turnkey” and actual condition can cause appraisal complications.
Question 6: What Are the HOA, Zoning, and Regulatory Restrictions?
This question has three distinct parts, and each one requires a real answer.
HOA restrictions can effectively kill an STR operation regardless of what the city allows. Many HOAs have amended their CC&Rs in the last three years to prohibit short-term rentals outright or to require owner occupancy for a minimum number of days per year. If the HOA allows STRs but the seller has been operating in a gray area, that is a disclosure item.
Zoning tells you whether the property sits in a district where STR operation is a permitted or conditional use. Some cities separate permit eligibility by zoning classification even within the same neighborhood.
Regulatory restrictions include anything pending: proposed ordinances, renewal caps, inspection requirements, and night-limit rules. A buyer who buys an 8-cap property and then discovers the city is phasing in a 90-night annual cap has a very different investment than what they underwrote. Pull the current ordinance and check the city’s planning commission agenda before listing.
Question 7: Who Manages It, and Can I Keep Them?
Many STR buyers want to inherit a running operation, not build one from scratch. If the property has a property manager, the buyer wants to know: who is it, what is the fee structure, what is the contract term, and is it assignable to a new owner?
Most property management agreements are not automatically assignable. The new owner will need to negotiate directly with the PM. Some managers are willing to onboard a new client mid-contract; others require starting fresh with a new agreement. If the PM contract has a 60-day termination notice and the buyer wants to switch managers, that is two months of management fees on top of the acquisition cost.
If the property is self-managed, the buyer needs to know that clearly so they can budget for a management solution or plan their own operations before close. Springing “oh, the seller managed it herself” on a buyer who assumed there was an infrastructure in place is an unpleasant surprise.
Question 8: Why Are They Selling?
Every investor asks this. It is not nosiness. It is underwriting. The narrative matters because it affects how the buyer reads every other number you have presented.
A seller moving out of state after retirement is a clean story. A seller who has been fighting with the HOA about STR restrictions is a red flag the buyer deserves to know about. A seller who is selling because the market softened and occupancy dropped from 78% to 54% over two years requires a very different conversation than one who bought the property as a placeholder and never fully optimized it.
Have the story straight with your seller before the first call. You do not need to volunteer negative details that are not material disclosures, but you should not be caught flat-footed when a sophisticated buyer probes the motivation.
The First-Call Prep Sheet
Before you go live on any STR listing, assemble these eight items. This is the one-page prep sheet that keeps you from saying “let me check” on the first investor call.
- T12 P&L: Trailing 12-month gross revenue and itemized expenses from the seller, on paper.
- ADR and occupancy: Actual platform data from the seller, plus market comps from the StaySTRA Analyzer for benchmarking.
- Permit status and transferability: Current permit number, expiration date, and written confirmation from the municipality of whether it transfers or requires reapplication.
- Booking calendar summary: How many future bookings are on the calendar, total deposit value held, and the agreed co-host or cancellation strategy.
- Conveyance list: Every item of furniture, equipment, and soft goods that stays with the property, signed off by the seller.
- HOA, zoning, and pending ordinance summary: CC&R language on STRs, current zoning classification, and any pending rule changes from the city or county.
- PM contract details: Manager name, fee percentage, contract term, termination notice period, and assignability clause. Or: documented confirmation that it is self-managed.
- Seller narrative: One or two sentences on why they are selling, aligned with the seller in advance.
Pull this together before you take the listing live and the first call becomes a demonstration of competence rather than a scavenger hunt. STR buyers close fast when they trust the agent. They stall or walk when they don’t.
For the complete framework, including how to price an STR on income rather than comps and how to handle the MLS description, see the listing-agent playbook.
Regulations and tool features change frequently. We do our best to keep this information current, but always verify deadlines, fees, and permit requirements directly with your local government or property management vendor before taking action.
Frequently Asked Questions
What financial documents should a listing agent have ready when selling an Airbnb?
The most important document is the trailing 12-month income statement, called a T12, which shows gross revenue and a line-by-line breakdown of expenses including management fees, cleaning costs, platform fees, and maintenance. Investors use this to calculate net operating income and model their return before making an offer. A verbal income estimate is not sufficient for a serious buyer.
Do STR permits transfer to the new owner when a short-term rental is sold?
In most U.S. jurisdictions, STR permits do not transfer automatically to a new owner. Cities including Newport Beach, San Antonio, Austin, San Diego, and Houston all require the buyer to apply for a new permit under current rules. In markets with permit caps, there is no guarantee the buyer will receive approval. Always verify the specific policy with the local municipality before representing transferability to a buyer.
What happens to existing Airbnb bookings when a property is sold?
Airbnb does not allow listings or bookings to be transferred between accounts. The most common solution is adding the new owner as a co-host on the seller’s existing account 30 to 45 days before closing, allowing them to manage future bookings through the transition. Alternatively, existing bookings can be canceled with full refunds to guests, and the new owner starts fresh. The approach should be agreed upon before going under contract.
What does “turnkey” mean when buying an Airbnb?
A turnkey STR means the property is fully operational from day one, including all furniture, linens, kitchenware, smart locks, noise monitors, and access to software accounts such as the channel manager and dynamic pricing tool. A written conveyance list specifying every item that stays with the property is the only reliable way to confirm what “turnkey” actually means in a specific transaction.
Can a property management agreement be transferred to a new STR owner?
Most property management agreements are not automatically assignable to a new owner. The buyer typically needs to negotiate a new agreement directly with the property manager, which may include a new fee structure or contract term. If the existing PM contract has a termination notice requirement of 30 to 90 days, the buyer needs to factor that timeline into their transition planning before closing.
Run the Numbers Before the First Offer
Before your buyer commits or your seller sets a price, run the market data. The StaySTRA Analyzer pulls real performance data from active comparables in your submarket so you can benchmark the subject property’s ADR and occupancy against what the market is actually producing. It covers 2,600+ U.S. markets and takes about five minutes to run.
For a deeper look at any specific market including active rental counts, average daily rates, and seasonal occupancy trends, check out the StaySTRA market profiles.
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