Borrowing from the boat owners' passel of proclamations, may I
suggest: "The best two days of a vacation rental owner's life are the
day he buys it and the day he sells it…"
Those who live near the shore often hear rumors about the piles of money that
vacation rentals bring in. "The summer months' rental income pays for the
entire year's mortgage," folks will say. That may be true, but what about
the rest of the expenses?
The problem with vacation rentals is twofold:
1. Operating expenses related to vacation rentals are similar to those of a
hotel — 60 percent to 75 percent of revenue; and
2. Prize vacation properties come with enormous price tags and staggering monthly mortgages, property
taxes, insurance, etc. Those are fees that must be paid, whether your occupancy
is 100 percent or zero.
How can revenue operating expenses be so high, you ask? Vacation rentals,
even a single property, requires a lot of work. You'll need to:
- Take calls from interested parties
- Market/advertise the property
- Build and maintain a website
- Shop for furnishings/replace them when they disappear
- Draft leases
- Process
rent payments
- Check in guests
- Schedule routine cleaning and maintenance
- Schedule gardening/landscaping services
- Pay bills
- Obtain insurance coverage
- Be available/responsive when emergencies arise
All these tasks take time, which is why property
management companies are able to command high fees. Sure, you can do the
work yourself, but either way you're going to have to fork over cash for
furniture, sheets, towels, utility bills, etc. All those costs add up, so it's
easy to see how roughly 75 percent of your revenue — not including your own time
or your mortgage payment — is paid out in expenses.
By contrast, a moderately priced, single rental unit or apartment should have
an expense ratio of 35 percent to 45 percent. That's 30 percent less than a
vacation rental.
Want another comparison? Vacationers come and go frequently, which means the
property manager may face two to three crises each week, all of which are
"urgent" because the renters are on vacation and want everything — the grill,
the hot tub, the window locks – to operate smoothly for the short time they're
with you.
On the other hand, a typical non-vacation rental unit should need attention
five to seven times per year with, perhaps, one of those problems
being urgent.
Simply put: a dollar of vacation rental income is really worth about a
quarter (25 cents of net operating profit on each $1 in income), while a dollar
of rental income on a non-vacation property is worth 55 to 65 cents. (Those
figures, again, are before the mortgage is paid.).
For those who would like a detailed financial picture, I've included an
estimated pro-forma financial statement below on a typical Mission
Beach town home or condo. Look at the Cash on Cash Returns; a vacation
rental may have a negative cash on cash return of 10 percent or
more.