Skip to content
StaySTRA - logo
  • Analyzer
  • Locations
  • Sell Me Your BNB
Sign In
  • Analyzer
  • Locations
  • Sell Me Your BNB
Sign In
  1. Home
  2. Hosting
  3. My Property Manager Was Just Acquired. Here Is What STR Hosts Are Navigating When the Consolidation Wave Hits Their Business

My Property Manager Was Just Acquired. Here Is What STR Hosts Are Navigating When the Consolidation Wave Hits Their Business

Avatar photo
Edgar Moreno
April 17, 2026 12 min read
Property manager office desk with keys and contract in a coastal vacation rental town, symbolizing STR management transition

Key Takeaways

  • The $250 million Belcrest acquisition of Towne Vacations moved roughly 3,000 vacation rental properties to a new owner overnight, and most hosts learned about it from an email, not a conversation.
  • When your STR property manager gets acquired, your management contract may or may not transfer automatically. The assignment clause in your agreement determines your rights.
  • Experienced hosts recommend a 90-day evaluation window after a PM acquisition before making permanent decisions about staying, switching, or self-managing.
  • Post-acquisition fee increases of 3 to 8 percentage points are common in the first 12 months. Review your contract’s fee adjustment provisions now, even if your PM has not been acquired yet.

On a Tuesday morning in early April, a property owner in Hilton Head, South Carolina opened her email to find a message she had never expected. The company managing her three-bedroom beach house for the past six years had been sold. Not her property. The company. The people she trusted with her keys, her guests, and her rental income had a new owner she had never met, never vetted, and never agreed to work with.

“I found out the same way I find out about a flash sale at Target,” she told me. “An email. No phone call. No warning. Just, ‘We’re excited to announce a new chapter.'”

She is not alone. On April 6, 2026, TowneBank finalized the sale of its resort property management segment, Towne Vacations, to Belcrest Vacations Acquisitions, LLC for $250 million in cash. The deal moved roughly 3,000 vacation rental properties across Hilton Head, the Smoky Mountains, Oak Island, and Deep Creek Lake under new ownership. For TowneBank, it was a strategic divestiture. Palabras bonitas (pretty words) about shareholder value and future growth. For the hosts whose income depends on that management relationship, it was something else entirely.

The Email That Changes Everything

Let’s call her Sandra. She is a composite of several hosts I spoke with in the days after the Belcrest announcement, but her story reflects a pattern that has played out across the vacation rental industry for years. Sandra bought her Hilton Head property in 2019. She lives in Charlotte, three and a half hours away. She chose Towne Vacations because a neighbor recommended them, because they answered the phone when she called, and because the local manager knew which weeks in June filled fastest and which contractors actually showed up on time.

That personal relationship is what Sandra was paying for. Not just the 22% management fee. The trust. La confianza.

Now Belcrest, a company established in 2026 with virtually no public track record, holds the other end of that relationship. And Sandra, like thousands of hosts navigating this kind of transition, is asking herself three questions: Do I stay? Do I find someone else? Or do I figure out how to do this myself?

This Is Not Just One Deal. This Is a Wave.

The Belcrest/Towne Vacations transaction did not happen in isolation. The vacation rental management industry has entered an aggressive consolidation phase. In early 2025, Casago acquired Vacasa for approximately $128.6 million, absorbing roughly 40,000 properties in one stroke. That deal promised continuity. Casago leadership said nothing would change, that local contacts would remain, that teams would be retained.

The reality has been more complicated. Former Vacasa markets have reported staff turnover, service gaps during the handover, and inconsistent communication with property owners. As of early 2026, Vacasa’s Trustpilot rating sat at 2.1 out of 5. Some markets were sold to operators who are not even Casago franchisees. The pattern is familiar to anyone who has watched consolidation in other industries: the press release says “exciting partnership,” and the people on the ground say, “nobody told us anything.”

For a deeper look at what this consolidation trend means for the STR management industry as a whole, our analysis of the Belcrest deal covers the financial and structural forces driving these acquisitions.

What Actually Happens to Hosts After an Acquisition

Walking through STR host forums and community groups after a PM acquisition announcement feels like walking through a neighborhood after a storm. Some people are calm. Some are panicking. Most are just trying to figure out what still works.

Here is what hosts consistently report in the months following a management company acquisition.

The Communication Gap

The acquiring company almost always underestimates how much direct communication property owners need. Hosts describe receiving a single email, sometimes a form letter, sometimes a brief FAQ. Rarely a phone call. Almost never a face-to-face meeting. For owners who chose their PM based on a personal relationship with a local manager, this feels like a betrayal, even when it is not intended as one.

The People Change

Retention payments in vacation rental acquisitions are typically structured with 75% of the deal as cash at closing and 25% tied to owner contract continuity over 12 to 24 months. That retention structure incentivizes keeping property owners on the books, not necessarily keeping the local team intact. The person who knew your property, who knew which guests left the porch light on and which ones left the place spotless, may not survive the transition. Recuerdo (I remember) talking with a host in the Smokies who said the hardest part was not the new company name on the statement. It was losing the local manager who had become something like family.

The Fees Shift

Post-acquisition fee increases of 3 to 8 percentage points are common within the first year. Sometimes the base management percentage stays the same, but new line items appear: technology fees, marketing surcharges, maintenance coordination fees. With STR management fees typically running 20 to 25% of gross revenue in 2026, even a modest increase changes the math on whether professional management makes sense for a given property. A host earning $60,000 in annual rental revenue who sees fees climb from 22% to 28% loses an additional $3,600 per year. That is real money. Dinero real.

The Service Disruption Window

Industry data suggests a 3 to 7% dip in operational margins during the first 12 months after an acquisition. For hosts, that dip translates into slower response times, missed maintenance requests, inconsistent guest communication, and sometimes lost bookings during the integration. The acquiring company is learning your property at the same time it is learning a hundred other properties. Systems are being merged. Vendor contracts are being renegotiated. During that window, your guests are the ones who feel it first.

The Decision: Stay, Switch, or Self-Manage

I have talked with hosts who have been through this transition more than once. Some stayed with the new management company and were glad they did. Some left immediately and wished they had waited. Some switched to self-management and discovered capabilities they did not know they had. There is no universal answer, but there is a framework that experienced operators tend to follow.

When Staying Makes Sense

If your property is remote (more than three hours from where you live), if you have multiple properties across different markets, or if peak season is imminent and switching would mean lost bookings, staying through the transition may be the practical choice. Give the new company 90 days. Evaluate their responsiveness, their guest reviews, and their revenue performance against the benchmarks you had with the previous management. If the numbers hold and the communication improves, you may have a workable relationship.

When Switching Managers Makes Sense

If you see fee increases without corresponding service improvements, if your local point of contact has left and not been replaced, or if guest reviews on your property have declined post-acquisition, it may be time to interview other management companies in your market. Ask each candidate specifically about their experience onboarding properties that left other PMs after an acquisition. The good ones will have a process for this. They will know what questions to ask and what data to transfer. If you are comparing platforms as part of this process, our Airbnb vs. Vrbo vs. Booking.com comparison for hosts can help you evaluate which channels give you the best returns.

When Self-Managing Makes Sense

If you live within an hour of your property, if you are comfortable with technology, and if you have a reliable local cleaning team, self-management in 2026 is more accessible than it has ever been. Property management software like Hospitable, Guesty, and OwnerRez can automate guest communication, pricing, and channel distribution. The tools that professional PMs use are increasingly available to individual hosts. The question is not whether you can do it. The question is whether your time is worth more than the 20 to 25% you are paying someone else.

For hosts who have been through regulatory disruptions and had to rethink their entire approach, the decision-making process feels familiar. STR investors who moved from restrictive cities to pro-host states went through a similar calculation: stay in a situation that no longer serves you, or take control of what comes next.

What to Check in Your PM Contract Right Now

Whether your property manager has been acquired or not, this is the moment to pull out your management agreement and read it with fresh eyes. Ahora mismo (right now). Here is what to look for.

The Assignment Clause

This is the single most important provision in a consolidation environment. Does your contract allow the management company to assign the agreement to a new entity without your consent? Some contracts include broad assignment language that lets the PM transfer your contract to any successor. Others require written owner approval. If your contract allows assignment without consent, you may already be bound to a company you did not choose. If it requires consent, you have leverage.

The Termination Clause

How much notice do you need to give? The industry standard is 30 to 60 days. Some contracts require 90 days or include penalties for early termination. Know your exit timeline before you need it.

Fee Adjustment Provisions

Can the management company raise fees unilaterally? Some contracts allow fee increases with 30 days notice. Others lock the fee for the contract term. If your contract allows unilateral increases, you are exposed to post-acquisition fee creep.

Performance Minimums

Does your agreement include any performance benchmarks? Occupancy floors? Revenue targets? If not, the new management company has no contractual obligation to match the performance of the old one.

Auto-Renewal Language

Many PM contracts auto-renew for successive one-year terms unless you provide written notice 30 to 60 days before the renewal date. If you miss that window, you may be locked in for another year with a company you are still evaluating.

Mi consejo (my advice): if you do not have a copy of your current management agreement saved where you can find it, request one today. Not tomorrow. Today.

Protecting Yourself in a Consolidation Market

The hosts who come through PM acquisitions with the least disruption are the ones who treated their management relationship like a business partnership from the start. They kept copies of every agreement. They tracked their own revenue numbers independently. They maintained direct relationships with their cleaning crews and maintenance vendors, not just through the PM’s system.

Going forward, experienced hosts recommend negotiating three specific protections into any new management agreement:

1. A consent-to-assign clause that requires your written approval before the contract can be transferred to a new owner.

2. A fee cap that limits annual fee increases to a defined percentage or ties them to a performance benchmark.

3. A 30-day termination provision that lets you walk with minimal notice if the management company changes ownership.

These are not aggressive asks. They are standard protections in commercial real estate. The vacation rental industry has simply been slow to adopt them, and hosts have been slow to demand them.

Sponsored — OfferMarket

Buy Your First STR With Long-Term Rental Financing

Flexible, long-term financing for short-term rental buyers. Rates from 5.75%. Instant online quote, no credit pull.

Explore RTL Financing Options →

Affiliate disclosure: StaySTRA may earn a referral fee.

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 before making decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do first when I learn my STR property manager has been acquired?

Pull out your management agreement and read the assignment clause and termination clause. These two provisions determine whether your contract automatically transferred to the new company and how much notice you need to give if you decide to leave. Do not make any permanent decisions in the first 30 days.

Can my property management company transfer my contract to a new owner without my permission?

It depends entirely on the assignment clause in your agreement. Many STR management contracts include broad assignment language that allows transfers to successor entities. If your contract includes this language, the new company may already be your manager. If it requires your written consent, you have the right to refuse the assignment and explore other options.

How long should I wait before deciding whether to stay with a new property manager after an acquisition?

Experienced hosts recommend a 90-day evaluation window. This gives the new management company time to complete the operational transition while giving you enough data points on responsiveness, guest reviews, and revenue performance to make an informed decision. If peak season falls within that window, the evaluation is even more revealing.

Is it realistic to switch from professional management to self-managing my STR in 2026?

Yes, if you live within reasonable driving distance of your property and have a reliable local support team for cleaning and maintenance. Property management software like Hospitable, Guesty, and OwnerRez can handle guest communication, dynamic pricing, and multi-platform listing distribution. The tools are more accessible and affordable than they were even two years ago.

What contract protections should I negotiate before signing with a new STR property manager?

Three provisions matter most in a consolidation environment: a consent-to-assign clause requiring your approval before the contract transfers to a new entity, a fee cap that limits annual increases, and a 30-day termination provision that gives you flexibility if the management company changes ownership or underperforms.

Running the Numbers for Yourself

If this transition has you rethinking whether professional management still makes financial sense for your property, the StaySTRA analyzer can help you model what your property could earn under different fee structures and management scenarios. Plug in your market, your property type, and your current numbers. Sometimes the clearest path forward starts with seeing what the data actually says about your specific situation.

Become a StaySTRA Insider

Join free — get our newsletter + 1 free property analysis/month.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Free membership includes property analyses and market insights.

Edgar Moreno

Edgar Moreno

Feature Writer & Editorial Voice

Feature writer and editorial voice, covering the human side of short-term rentals. I tell the stories of hosts, guests, and neighbors, because behind every listing is someone worth listening to.

Writes about: Airbnb Stories Localities Hosting Short-Term Rentals Property Management
44 articles · Writing since Apr 2025
Previous Article The $250 Million STR Deal: What the Belcrest-TowneVacations Acquisition Tells Us About Where Professional Property Management Is Headed Next Article Your STR Permit Was Denied. Now What. A Legal Guide to STR License Appeals in 2026

Analyze Any Property

Get instant revenue projections and market insights for your next STR investment.

Try the Analyzer

Table of Contents

Loading...

Related Articles

  • Beach cottage in Destin Florida during Easter weekend showing spring short term rental demand
    For These STR Hosts, Easter Weekend Is the Hidden Revenue Peak of the Year April 15, 2026
  • The Hidden Human Stories Behind Successful Short-Term Rental Design Transformations
    The Hidden Human Stories Behind Successful Short-Term Rental Design Transformations November 8, 2025
  • Warm inviting guest bedroom with fresh linens and welcome basket being prepared for World Cup visitors
    Preparing Your Airbnb for the World Cup and What Hosts Are Really Going Through February 13, 2026

Popular Posts

  • 1 Essential Tips for Effective Short Term Rental Property Management  
  • 2 Unlock Profits: Buying a Vacation Rental Property Made Easy
  • 3 Navigating the Future of New York City’s Short-Term Rental Market
  • 4 San Antonio’s Short-Term Rental Market Trends
  • 5 Guesty: Is This the Future of Vacation Rental Management?

Categories

19 1 29 1 35 1 Airbnb Stories 24 Buying An Airbnb 23 Data 62 Editorial 14 Gossip 13 Hosting 21 Hot Topics 62 Legal 25 Lenders 11 Localities 120 Mortgage 4 Property Management 21 Regulations 93 Short-Term Rentals 53 STR Buying 46 STR Market Data 53 Tax 10 Tech 37 Tools 27 Uncategorized 5

Popular Tags

STR taxes short-term rental tax tips Airbnb taxes bonus depreciation cost segregation STR tax loophole host tips str security airbnb cameras vacation rental tech str tools host equipment smart home
StaySTRA - logo

The smart way to analyze short-term rental investments. Get revenue projections, market data, and insights powered by real short-term rental market data.

Product

  • Analyzer
  • Pricing
  • Locations

Resources

  • Blog
  • STR Tools
  • STR Laws
  • Top Markets

Company

  • Sell Your BNB
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Subscribe to newsletter

Sign up to get STR insights and market data delivered to your inbox.

©2026 StaySTRA.com. All rights reserved.

Take a look at our sister companies

Neuhaus Realty Group - Austin Real Estate Broker Neuhaus Realty Group Bizzy Lizzy - Embroidered Women's Clothing Boutique Bizzy Lizzy Boutique Kendall Creek Properties - Real Estate Investment & Property Management Kendall Creek Properties
×
Get Started Now

Create your account to start analyzing properties

or
Forgot password?

Don't have an account? Sign up Already have an account? Sign in

Welcome back to StaySTRA

Analyze properties, track investments, and grow your short-term rental portfolio

Instant property analysis
Advanced STR metrics
Save & compare properties
Choose Your Plan
Stay Ahead of the Market

Join 2,500+ STR investors getting weekly insights

Weekly STR market insights
New feature announcements
Investment tips & strategies
Exclusive subscriber offers
Send Us a Message

We typically respond within 24 hours

Please sign in or create an account to send your message

Choose Your Plan

Select a plan to get started with StaySTRA

Free
$0 forever

1 property analysis per month • Basic STR metrics • Email support

Pro Monthly
$7 per month

Unlimited property analyses • Advanced STR metrics • Save & compare properties • Print reports

Best Value
Pro Annual
$59 per year Save $25

Everything in Pro Monthly • Best value - equivalent to 2 months free • Priority support