Updated over 1 year ago on . Most recent reply
Should I switch my Nashville long-term rental to short-term?
I have a 2015 3/2 single family home just north of Nashville in Robertson County. I've been renting it to the same tenant almost 4 years now. I'm just making about $250 net each month off of $1900/month rent (about $1,450 total for mortgage, insurance, taxes, etc.) , but appreciation has helped, the tenant is great, I have a property manager. As long as there are no repairs I have to approve and monitor, it's hands off. It works for me just fine.
However, my uncle who handles short-term rentals suggests I might could make much more turning it into short-term rental. But with that comes more expenses, more insurance, more turnover, more cleaning services (I live 3 hours away) - so much more to deal with. And I'd have to spend $10,000 to $20,000 I imagine to buy furniture, kitchenware, beds, dressers, etc.
The extra hassle wouldn't be worth it to me unless I was able to net on average $1,500 a month. Even if I did that, the first year itself would end up only paying for the furnishings.
This might be a broad question, but here it is - with a $1,450 mortgage, insurance, taxes payment, could / would a nice 3/2 about 40 minutes north of Nashville downtown net enough to be worth it (again, my "worth it" would be netting $1,500 a month on average after mortgage, insurance, listing fees, management fees, cleaning services, etc.)?
Most Popular Reply
Hi Christopher, I'm a realtor in the area and I thought I'd run some numbers for you just to get a better picture of the risk/reward of a LTR vs STR.
Currently netting $250 a month on the LTR
If you rented it as a STR on a nightly basis for $135 with an expected estimated vacancy of 56% (average for the area) that's a gross income of $21,681 less your mortgage $17,400 and less expenses such as water electric and internet of an estimated $4200 puts your annual net at $81.
To make the STR profitable for the additional work you'd have to rent it for more than $135 a night and for more nights than the Nashville average of 44% occupancy.



