Short-Term or Long-Term Rental in Austin: What the Numbers Show
Verdict: Short-term rental wins on gross revenue, grossing roughly 136% more than long-term rental, though premium sale prices and Type 2 license rules narrow the net margin.
Best For: Active operators willing to navigate Austin's Type 2 licensing and accept appreciation-led returns over pure cash flow.
Scores out of 10 across yield, regulations, tax, risk, and market fundamentals. How we score
Underlying Assumptions (data as of May 2026):
- Property Price: 3-bedroom houses estimated at around $522,850
- Monthly Long-Term Rent: Approximately $1,783
- Short-Term Rental Nightly Rate: Around $269 per night (varies seasonally)
- Assumed Short-Term Rental Occupancy: 55% average across the region (varies significantly between specific locations)
- Available Short-Term Rental Nights: 330 per year (assumes 35 days for cleaning, changeovers, and maintenance)
- Regulations: Permissive but licensed. Austin requires a Type 2 operating license for non-owner-occupied short-term rentals (permit cost $735), permitted in all residential zones with density limits. Source
See your suburb's full short-term rental vs long-term rental breakdown in the dashboard
Premium Market Dynamics: Austin's High Prices Reset the Yield Math
Austin (Travis County) sits firmly in premium-market territory, with median 3-bedroom houses estimated at around $522,850, more than double the Texas median of $235,000 and the US median of $242,500. Premium pricing means investors enter the market expecting appreciation and tax shelter, not headline cash flow. The trade-off is visible in long-term rental gross yield of just 3.9%, well below both the Texas median of 6.1% and the US median of 5.3%. Across the 48 ZIP codes in Travis County, sale prices range from $220,316 on the urban edge to $1,897,500 in the wealthiest enclaves, so the city-level numbers obscure significant suburb-by-suburb variation that the dashboard makes visible.
Estimates for a typical 3-bedroom house. Figures are modelled from market data; not guaranteed outcomes.
Both revenue figures match the Dashboard's calculation for this market.
Short-term rental grosses roughly 136% more than long-term rental on the typical Austin 3-bedroom house, but the higher operating costs of short-term rental, including platform fees, utilities, and the 15% hotel occupancy tax, eat into that revenue advantage.
Break-even Occupancy
Short-term stays only outperforms long-term lease in Austin if occupancy exceeds 23%. Below that threshold, the typical investor would gross more by signing a 12-month lease. Austin's market average occupancy of 55% sits comfortably above this break-even, but individual properties below downtown, off the Lake Travis corridor, or in slow-tourism pockets can fall below it during shoulder seasons.
Occupancy Sensitivity
Occupancy is the single biggest variable in short-term rental returns. At 40% occupancy, gross revenue drops to roughly $35,508, only modestly above what a long-term rental would produce. At 65% occupancy, gross revenue climbs to about $57,701. The 100% ceiling, set by Austin's effective 330-night model and the $269 typical nightly rate, is roughly $88,770. The dashboard models any occupancy you specify against your actual purchase price.
Austin Suburb Yields Vary Widely: From 5.8% to 7.5%
Yields across Travis County diverge sharply by ZIP, and the city-level median hides the spread. Del Valle/Airport (78719) leads the county at 7.5% gross, with sale prices around $302,000 and rents near $1,875. East Austin/Colony Park (78724) and East Austin (78721) follow at 6.5% and 6.4% respectively. The east-side ZIPs typically show stronger cash flow because sale prices have not appreciated as quickly as those in the central core, while rents have kept pace with the metro.
These are averages per suburb. The dashboard breaks it down further, by bedroom count and property type, so you can model your specific property.
View Austin in the dashboard → Free preview · every bedroom count and property type
For full per-suburb filtering and saved scenarios, $19 24-hour access. Get access
Operating Costs Eat the Short-Term Rental Premium in Austin
Operating costs in Austin are heavier on the short-term rental side and drive the gap between gross revenue and net income. For a 3-bedroom Austin house grossing $48,426 on short-term rental, total annual operating costs come to roughly $38,689, leaving net income of about $9,737 and a net yield of 1.9%. Long-term rental costs are lower, totalling around $17,078, with net income near $3,403 and a net yield of 0.7%.
The default short-term rental cost stack on a typical Austin 3-bed house includes Airbnb host fees of 15.5% (around $7,506 annually), short-term rental insurance at $6,729, maintenance and furnishing replacement of $7,799, utilities at $2,640, state and city lodging taxes of $7,264, and property tax of $6,751. The figures assume self-management, matching the dashboard default; if you choose to hire a professional manager instead, add roughly $12,107 per year, which would lower net yield. Long-term rental costs include landlord insurance at $5,229, maintenance of $5,098, and the same property tax of $6,751.
Upfront, expect roughly $20,250 to furnish a 3-bedroom short-term rental to a competitive standard for the Austin market. The 15% hotel occupancy tax is collected and remitted by Airbnb directly under the April 2025 platform-collection rule, so it does not appear as a host expense, but it does affect guest pricing and demand sensitivity.
Austin's 1.3% Property Tax Takes a Visible Bite
Texas has no state income tax, which is a meaningful boost for rental investors, but Travis County's effective property tax rate of 1.3% is well above the national average and applies whether the property earns short-term or long-term rental income. On the typical $522,850 sale price, that translates to about $6,751 per year, a recurring drag that does not exist in cheaper Texas counties at this scale.
Tax Implications for Austin Investors
Austin investors get two large federal tax shields. Depreciation on the building portion lets the IRS treat roughly $418,280 (about 80% of the $522,850 sale price) as deductible over 27.5 years, which is around $15,210 per year. That deduction often turns the visible cash-flow profit into a paper tax loss, particularly in the early years of ownership.
Mortgage interest is fully deductible on Schedule E with no SALT cap, and Texas has no state income tax, so investors keep a higher percentage of after-tax income than peers in California, New York, or Oregon. Material participation in short-term rental operations, including handling bookings, cleaning oversight, and pricing, can let investors deduct losses against active income rather than the passive activity rules that apply to long-term lease, a meaningful structural edge for hands-on operators. The 1031 exchange remains available for trading into another rental at appreciated value without immediately recognizing capital gains.
Austin Yields Sit Below the Texas and US Medians
Austin's premium pricing puts long-term rental yield well below the Texas state average and the US median. Cheaper Texas markets, like the high-yield ZIPs in San Antonio's Bexar County or smaller cities further out, regularly produce double-digit gross yields because their sale prices sit closer to $100,000 than $500,000.
Comparison of key investment metrics.
| Metric | Austin (Travis) | Texas Avg | US Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-Bed Sale Price | $522,850 | $235,000 | $242,500 |
| Monthly Rent | $1,783/mo | $1,191/mo | $1,070/mo |
| Gross Yield (Long-Term Rental) | 3.9% | 6.1% | 5.3% |
For investors who want to compare Austin to other premium Texas metros, peer markets like Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio show different cost-yield trade-offs, and Texas Rental Investment Insights, Austin Apartments Yield 6.6% vs Houses at 5.9% on Short-Term Rental, and Fort Worth's Short-Term Rental Ban Makes Long-Term the Only Play cover those comparisons in detail. The Texas rental market insights provides a state-wide overview of how Texas markets stack up.
Investment Bottom Line: Austin Suits Operators, Not Cash-Flow Buyers
Austin works best for investors who want appreciation exposure, federal tax shelter through depreciation, and active short-term rental returns, rather than passive cash-flow yields. The typical buyer should be willing to navigate Type 2 licensing, run the property as an active business, and accept that the headline 3.9% long-term yield is below the national median.
| Investor Type | Fit |
|---|---|
| Cash Flow Focused | Fair |
| Appreciation Focused | Excellent |
| Short-Term Rental Operator | Good |
| High Leverage (80%+ LTV) | Fair |
Closing costs and transfer taxes apply on purchase; check current rates with your title company or real-estate attorney before underwriting. Data reflects market conditions as of May 2026, and a closer view of the methodology is available in the data sources and market score methodology pages. After All Costs, Dallas Airbnb Beats Long-Term Rentals provides additional context on peer Texas metros.
Take Austin further in the dashboard
Drill into individual suburbs, run your own price and rent assumptions, and compare property types side-by-side.
Open Austin →Need full filtering and saved scenarios?
$19 for 24-hour access. All suburbs, all property types. Unlock the dashboard
This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.
Methodology and Assumptions
Defaults used in the figures above. All inputs are adjustable in the dashboard.
How available nights are determined
Available nights default to 330 per year, reflecting an active operator with minimal blocked time. Where local regulations cap whole-home short-term lets (for example London at 90 nights, New South Wales at 180), the cap is applied. In markets where short-term rental requires owner-occupancy or is otherwise prohibited for investment properties, available nights drop to zero.
How occupancy is measured
The percentage of available nights that get booked, drawn from market data. A property listed for 200 nights with 100 bookings shows 50% occupancy. Adjustable in the dashboard.
Long-term rental management default
Defaults to self-managed (zero management fee), reflecting the most common arrangement for US individual investors. The dashboard slider lets you add a property manager fee if you plan to outsource.
Short-term rental management default
Set to self-managed (zero management fee) by default, the most common arrangement for individual investors. Hiring a professional manager typically costs around 25% of gross revenue and reduces net yield proportionally. Toggle in the dashboard.
How property tax is calculated
Calculated as a percentage of property value, varying by state and county. California properties show lower effective rates due to Proposition 13's 1% cap on assessed value. Property tax sits with the owner; long-term tenants do not pay it.
Local regulations
Check state, council, and HOA rules before investing; these change frequently. The regulations summary in this article reflects the latest data we hold. Always verify the live position with the local authority.
Sampling and data sources
Short-term rental yield figures reflect properties currently listed on short-term rental platforms. In high-tourism markets, listings tend to concentrate in central postcodes, which can pull city-median yields above what residential areas of the same city would achieve. Yields for any specific suburb may differ significantly from the city-wide median.
For metric definitions and broader methodology, see the About page.