BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - This Could Be Like Getting into Airbnb in 2012
Episode Date: November 29, 2024While short-term rentals are seeing slowing demand, mid-term rentals are taking off (and fast). Mid-term rentals, also called medium-term rentals or MTRs, are thirty-day or longer stays, usually for t...raveling professionals or those who need temporary housing while relocating. These rentals give you more rent than a regular long-term rental, less turnover than short-term rentals, and can be successful in even the most average of markets. Where are MTRs heading next? We brought on Jeff Hurst, CEO of the leading MTR listing website Furnished Finder, to share the data he’s seeing. Jeff believes MTRs are still years away from peaking in demand and supply. But maybe he’s a little biased as someone who works in the field. Even as an industry insider, Jeff brought some solid stats that show that MTR is far from falling off the investing map. He’s so bullish on this strategy that he believes MTR is now where Airbnb was in 2012. But what should you do to get in on MTR investing? Jeff shares the best MTR markets and signs for whether or not your city could be a great place to try it, plus the surprising property type that works best for this strategy (MUCH more affordable than short-term rentals) and how landlords and investors can find tenants WITHOUT going through pricey booking platforms. In This Episode We Cover: The state of the mid-term rental market and why it’s looking much brighter than short-term rentals Mid-term rental investing explained, and who’s staying at these properties Why rural markets actually make terrific mid-term rental investing areas How to start investing in mid-term rentals WITHOUT owning a single property (rental arbitrage) How to find tenants for your mid-term rentals without paying high listing fees The (surprisingly) small property types that work best for mid-term rentals And So Much More! Links from the Show Join BiggerPockets for FREE Let Us Know What You Thought of the Show! Shop the BiggerPockets Bookstore Black Friday SALE Grab the MTR Book, “30-Day Stay” Find an Investor-Friendly Agent in Your Area How to Invest in Medium-Term Rentals Connect with Henry Furnished Finder Stats Connect with Dave (00:00) Intro (03:10) What Are Mid-Term Rentals? (07:33) Mid-Term Demand is Still Growing (12:18) Best Mid-Term Markets (20:39) Are We Past the Peak? (22:46) Finding Tenants (26:38) Fewer Regulations? (32:42) Bullish on Mid-Term’s Future Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-1050 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everyone, it's Dave. And first and foremost, just want to say, happy Thanksgiving to all of you on behalf of the whole Bigger Pockets family.
We could not make these shows without your continued support. So thank you for listening.
Thank you for all the feedback. And thanks for the incredible community you've created in the forums.
Today's show is an episode that we previously aired on our sister podcast on the market, where Henry Washington and I had a conversation with the CEO of Fernandez.
Finder Jeff Hurst. This show is all about midterm rentals, which is a space where there's honestly
just not a lot of good hard data available. It's not like long-term rentals or short-term rentals.
So this episode was very popular because it was a rare peak behind the curtain of how MTR economics
actually work and whether there's still more demand than supply in most markets. The conversation
was great because Jeff is really candid about which cities aren't doing so well and which cities he's seeing
MTR investors do really well right now. So check it out and we'll be back with a new episode of the
Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast on Monday. Midterm rentals, which basically just means rental properties
rented between 30 days and less than one year, has been one of the most popular investment strategies
over the last few years. And for good reason, because they're a great way to generate cash flow,
even in this market. But with so many new investors getting in on this game, the question becomes,
how much demand is there left? Did we miss out because we weren't early adopters of this strategy?
Is the midterm rental market going to follow the short term rental market and see some
struggles with oversaturation and peaking demand? Today, we'll get into all of this as we
break down the state of midterm rentals.
Hey, everyone, it's Dave. Welcome to On the Market. I admit, although it's been very popular,
I have never invested in a midterm rental. I've stayed in.
one, but because we are obviously looking at this from an investment standpoint, I'm bringing in
my friend Henry Washington to co-host today because he does have experience owning midterm rentals.
Henry, what's up, man?
What's up, Dave?
How are you, man?
Glad to be here.
Good.
Good to have you here.
How many midterm rentals do you have?
I've got four and we just started working on another duplex.
So soon to be six.
Nice, man.
Well, thanks for backing me up here.
So I wouldn't just be out here asking uninformed stupid questions like usual.
Now, these are my favorite kind of episodes because I get to take notes.
All right.
Well, what are we going to talk about today then?
Yeah, today our guest is Jeff Hurst.
Jeff is a CEO furnished finder, which means he's got access to all of the data to help answer
your questions and ours about the future of the midterm rental market.
I am stoked because I have looked for midterm rental data everywhere.
It does not exist pretty much anywhere public.
But that's why we have Jeff coming on because as the CEO of the biggest listing platform,
He has data that we can now share with you.
So let's get into it.
Jeff, welcome to the show.
Thanks for being here.
My pleasure to be here.
So let's just start with a definition of midterm rentals.
This might not be a term that everyone in our audience is familiar with.
So what is a midterm rental?
I think the easiest definition is it's a rental that's more than 30 days.
And so I kind of think of the bookends as on one end, you've got players like Airbnb and Verbo,
Verbo, where I was president and worked for a long time, they do basically nightly and weekly rentals.
But the average rentals, less than seven days.
It's typically more leisure.
And, you know, they're pioneers in kind of this home sharing and rental economy.
On the opposite end, you've got long term, typically a year or more, led by portals that would seem more like Zillow or the co-star group.
And I'd say predominantly more of an offline business, a lot of who you know and how you work for tenants and referrals.
paper and lease-based. And in the middle, a furnished finder is really about these 30-day plus days.
Got more popular in the pandemic. And also because of regulatory changes that have made a lot of
the short-term opportunity evaporate, especially in major metro areas like New York, Austin,
San Francisco, Las Vegas. And who does this middle market, as you describe, serve? What does the
clientele look like? And are the hosts and investors who invest in these types of properties different?
Yeah, so the hosts, you know, we'd call them landlords. The landlords, in particular in the case of our platform, are typically entrepreneurs. And so we have about 300,000 properties. We have about 225,000 landlords. And so, you know, on average, they have 1.3 properties. In general, people just have one. And so it's more of a four rent by owner type of situation. You know, we do have people who have 10 or 20 and have really grown into having a bigger business. But this is an entrepreneur. And, you know, the other
type of midterm accommodation that would be competitive here would be more corporate like an
extended stay America hotel option or it would be something like corporate housing where maybe
the gray stars of the world have dedicated units and property management contracts where they're
still competing for the same types of tenants. On the tenant side, we see a few big use cases.
We got basically our start and traveling medical. And so nurses, locum tenems, and there was a,
you know, huge need for that housing during the pandemic. And that's really what made for
finder grow. Additionally, we do a similarly sized. So both are about 30% traveling for work.
That could be military. It could be construction contract. It could be consulting engagement,
sales teams, all of that sort of stuff where you relocate someplace for 30, 60, 90 days a project.
And then the fastest growing is actually relocations where people are thinking about moving to a
new city, but there's not enough liquidity or good deals in the housing market. And so they try
before they buy. They get one of these homes for 90, 180 days.
while they're figuring out what they're going to do longer term.
That's an interesting use case.
I hadn't thought about that before.
So the try before you buy methodology, you know,
because to think you have to pick up your entire family, essentially, and go to a market.
And, you know, 90, 180 days, you're almost, you know, planning routes if you're working.
I like that, Henry, because if I stay somewhere for seven days, I'm convinced that I can move to any single market.
I'm like, somewhere in five days, I'm like, I'm moving here.
It's good.
But then after, like if you ever go on vacation, if you're lucky enough to go on vacation for two or three weeks, by two or three weeks in, you're like, ah, you know, maybe I'm not moving here.
So I like that policy of try before you're buying.
This seems like a perfect use case for it.
Frequently, the reason people end up needing to sell and move is actually what are they going to do with their stuff?
Like, where are you going to put all the furniture from the last house before the new house?
It's gotten so much easier to basically store it and not have to make a decision on, you know, a, you know, seriously upside down and, you know,
most situations buying a house that you need to be in long enough to appreciate and get your money
out of it just because of furniture. Like, leave the furniture in storage and go be sure you love the
neighborhood, you love the house, and are finding a good deal. My toxic trait is that three days
into vacation, I'm on Zelo home shopping. So I can't believe it takes you three days. I arrive at
the hotel and I'm instantly shopping for houses. I haven't bought one yet though. So that's good. It's just a
hobby. So one thing I do want to ask, so I do have some midterm rentals here in northwest
Arkansas. And what I have seen over the past four to six months is we are getting an
increase in longer term bookings because we list both short and midterm on them. And we are
getting an increase in the midterm bookings. And I was wondering, is that a trend that you are
seeing nationwide? Is MTR gone up over the last two to five years? Or,
Or it's just kind of a mixed market with Airbnb.
You know, it's gone up, including on Airbnb.
You know, it's, it is not a well-researched category.
It's hard to find data on it.
It's not tracked by the platforms like AirDNA.
But what you, what we do know, one from Airbnb, their percent long term has grown
since pre-pandemic, but their business has grown a hell of a lot.
And so it's between, it's close to 20 percent of all their nights are in 30-day plus
days at Airbnb.
Wow.
And that's enough nights to where your profits.
where you're probably talking about, you know, more than $10 billion of rental that's flowing through Airbnb.
You know, in a similar time horizon, what you've seen at Furnish Finder, our inventory has grown
about 8X since 2019, from 35,000 homes to over 300,000.
Wow.
And we know that today, Furnish Finder's demand, so think about people shopping on our site are up plus or
minus 40% year on year, whereas demand at the larger players, and I mean, they've got bigger numbers,
so it's harder to grow that fast.
but Airbnb and Verbo would be more like 10%.
And so there is a shift here.
I think it's happening from both sides of the market.
I think some of the long term and buyers are actually going midterm,
but I think some of the short term is actually shifting out.
Yeah, it's interesting.
The demand has been so much better than our long term rentals that we are like looking
at shifting other properties that we have into the midterm model because the cash flow
is just substantially higher.
And so in terms of,
with this increased demand. Are there some types of homes, maybe it's bedroom and bathroom,
maybe its amenities offered that tend to perform better given this increased demand? Definitely.
So I think the easiest way to think about it is instead of catering to a family or multiple
families like you frequently would on the short-term side, like it's largely group travel.
The average party size at Verbo was almost five people. You're really catering to typically an
individual traveling or a couple, and occasionally it's a relocating fan.
family or insurance. And so the sweet spot for midterm would be more like $2,500 and under for monthly
rent, whereas the sweet spot for a vacation rental would usually be about $1,500 to $2,000 in weekly
rent. And so you've got a lower price point. And that usually means you've also got a smaller
footprint. And so studio through two bedroom would be the sweet spot. And if it's a two bedroom,
it might actually be one of the bedrooms going to be an office or used for kind of a
multi-purpose instead of it's going to be more occupancy in people. And then,
then you'll have people who might be looking at a house that they would live in long term that's
three or four bedroom. But for 90 days, they're willing to be in a two bedroom and have the
kids double or triple up because they don't actually want to spend the extra money while they're
on a stipend or while they're figuring it out. All right. Now that we have a sense of what's
driving demand for midterm rentals, what are the markets that offer the most opportunity for
investors today? Jeff's insight on the cities with the most demand and the most unmet demand
right after this short break.
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What's up, investors?
Welcome back to On the Market.
We're here with Jeff Hurst, and we're talking about midterm rentals.
Jeff, I'm curious how an investor listening to this might start to evaluate markets because
healthcare, to me, maybe you can figure that out.
There's certain markets where there are just kind of hubs of hospitals, and you can
probably track that a little bit.
But these other two pillars that you've talked about, business travel, insurance, trying
before you're buying, how, as investors, do you figure out where those things are going on
so that you can underwrite your deals and try and determine where occupancy is going to be
strong and where you're, I don't know if you call it ADR, basically your monthly rent is
going to be strong.
Yeah, we think in terms of monthly rent, I think there's a few things.
And so when you look at the commonality of like places that work the best, two of our best,
biggest and best markets are Seattle and Nashville, you know, where you've got an intersection
of corporations, academic institutions, health care and leisure, you've kind of got it all.
Like there's just a ton of different ways you can make money.
And I think it's kind of a cautionary tale.
Like you can be close to a hospital and do great with hospital, but you might be close
to a hospital and do great with traveling corporate or academic.
It just depends on the layout.
I think the most important things to understand are, one, have a thesis of who your, you know,
target tenant is, but then really know the town.
And that's where, you know, your examples on vacationing and short-term rentals,
it is hard to be a good buyer in short-term in a leisure market because you're there for three days or seven days.
And everything seems awesome.
Yeah, I've got 50 of those safe searches on Zillow 2.
And that's why I encourage people in midterm to like, start with where you live.
You know, you know the commuter corridor.
You know what companies are in town.
And frequently, the way people get started here is they'll actually take out a long-term lease
and have an agreement with the long-term landlord that they can mid-term sublet.
And so you can do this without coming up with a ton of capital.
And you can actually get started and get a feel for the market and then potentially
participate in the appreciation with your next midterm rental and something where you might
actually put your own capital at risk in terms of a down payment and commitment.
I admit, I've had a lot of people reach out to me for my long term rentals asking to do that.
And I've said, no, I don't know why.
But I am curious if there's upside to the landlord, because I think for our audience,
they might be curious at this on both levels, one, buying their own midterm rental or if there's some play where a long-term rental could benefit by allowing this, even if they're not going to be the operator.
To me, the upside to the long term is if you've got a vacancy and there's someone that wants you to pay me market or above market rate, like you're solving my problem.
And, you know, I think the difference between three or four tenants a year and one, it's kind of minimal compared to a short-term rental where you're talking about 40 to 60 turnovers.
It's not the same type of wear and tear.
It's not the same type of use case in terms of who's there. These are typically professionals and families.
And so, you know, to me, I think that the way to think about the arbitrage model is one, it's a good win-win for both parties if you find the right interested parties.
You know, you don't want to surprise somebody with it.
And you want to be sure if you're the one who's taking out the lease, that you've got some protection, if it goes really well, that at the end of your two or three-year long-term lease, the landlord doesn't eat it all because they might see how well it's going and raise your rent commensurately.
And so you need a partnership there as opposed to kind of just a, you know, opaque agreement in terms of I'm going to take this lease and make more money on the midterm.
It does need to be a partnership there because you are going to put capital or risk on furniture.
One question I have kind of along these same lines. You mentioned Seattle and Nashville as the two most popular markets. Are there some markets that stand out in terms of maybe there's unmet demand? And kind of on that same note, when you're looking at the market and you're looking at the demand, like what's some of the best ways to know like, is this oversaturated with midterm rentals? Or is that even a thing? Like, how do I know that if I'm going to jump into this market where I think I'm going to have some demand that I'm not jumping into this giant pool of competitive?
where I'm not going to get the bookings, I think.
Yeah, I mean, a few things I want to address on that.
So first of all, you know, I'm not saying go buy in Nashville and Seattle.
Like, those are two very expensive cities.
You know, a lot of people want to go there, but they're also expensive, you know.
And so I'm not suggesting those are the best investment theses.
Oh, sorry, guys.
How about we ask again and start over since my son just called asking why the Internet's not working.
Do you need to restart the router?
Yeah, no, there's a, there's a spectrum.
outage in Austin, and I'm sure he is losing his shit because it's also a school holiday.
He's bored.
He has got to go outside and play basketball.
There's no getting around.
Yeah, so I'll start from the top.
You know, I'm not suggesting Seattle and Nashville are the best investment opportunities.
You know, that's where the most people want to go in our model, but they're two really
expensive cities with a lot of competition for deals.
And so, you know, it could make sense, but it'd make more sense like a short-term rental play
if you're looking to buy in a mountain or resort town, and that you're really,
betting on appreciation probably more than cash flow to get the numbers to work. And that works for a lot of
investors. If you're trying to get things to work on a cash approach, I think it's actually more rural
and it's more small and medium-sized cities. And the defining characteristic is what are the lodging
alternatives for someone who needs to stay 90 days? What does it look like on a hotel map? What does it
look like on an Airbnb map? And do you think you can be distinctive there? And that's where I think there's
so many compelling places, whether it's Arkansas, rural Maine is a place we see a lot of this,
New Hampshire. I keep hearing about Monroe, Louisiana, where there's a lot of construction coming in
and no hotels. These are the types of deals where you can actually get in a great entry price
and have a lot of cash availability. And I think the best ways to approach it are, all right,
what does an extended stay America sell a room for in this town? If it's $120 a night,
go rent it for a night and see what an extended stay America is a night for one night.
can you provide a better experience at that at less money?
And frequently, you can provide a way better experience at a lot cheaper rent than an extended stay
America.
And you're going to be blowing the tenant's minds and guaranteeing the referrals and long-term
participation in your unit.
And so I'd start there.
There's ways to use furnished finder.
Just search the map like a consumer, similar to how people use Zillow to get a feel
for what's out there at different bedroom bathroom combinations.
And then Airbnb, AirDNA, Zillow, your kind of.
kind of calibrating across these three types of portals to figure out whether you think your thesis
bears out. You said a couple of things I really want to touch on that I think were important.
You said to pay attention to hotel demand, right, and to look at the area on a hotel map.
Like, that's a huge tip. I hope that everybody writes that down and starts looking into that
because that's precisely why the midterm rentals that I have are in the very specific city
that I have them in. Because what I know about this city is that there is a, you know,
tourist demand for mountain bikers. There is a big corporate demand for Walmart Tyson and J.B. Hunt.
And there is a lack of hotels. There's just not a lot of really nice hotels. And so you've got
people traveling in both for corporate and for construction and for leisure, but the places to say
aren't nice enough. And so that is something that you can absolutely research. But I think what's
most important here is like this is still going to require you as an investor to understand the
market with some intricate level of detail in some levels so that you're not buying properties
in areas where as soon as you put them on the market, you're wondering why you're not getting
them filled because there still is some art and some science to finding the right location.
Yeah, I agree.
And I think the one thing I'd add is whether it's extended to America, Windham, Marriott, Hilton,
trust that those companies are pretty good at their diligence on where to put a hotel.
And so if your thesis is there's six hotels over here, so I want to be 12 miles away,
like I'd re-examine the thesis, there's probably a good reason there's six hotels there,
and they probably know something about commuter habits and where the companies are
and where people want to be.
And, you know, again, nothing's full proof in terms of a strategy,
but it's a good indication that if you're going to compete with an extended stay America,
you might want to be close to it as opposed to far.
That's very smart.
It's similar with food trucks and restaurants, right? There's a reason they bunch all together.
Exactly. Jeff, I'm curious. We're seeing in short-term rentals, which you're obviously very familiar with,
sort of a, I don't know if you want to call it a peaking of a market, but there's been a lot of supply.
We hear that revenue per unit is starting to decline. And I'm wondering if you think that there's risk of a similar trajectory happening in the midterm rental space.
I don't think there's near-term risk, you know, I think over the long term, everything,
normalizes and people are really feeling that in short-term rentals.
The pandemic was a huge boon.
More inventory came online.
More people grew accustomed to it.
But it's important to remember, 75% of U.S. lodging is still hotels.
And so that's just three to one.
The advantage is hotels versus short-term rentals in terms of revenue.
What I expect we're seeing in midterm, and I spent 13 years in short-term rentals,
you know, it feels more like 2012 to me in short-term rentals than it does 2022.
And so I don't think we're near a peak.
I think there are a lot of durable consumer trends in America right now, you know, housing market
liquidity, people trying before they buy, digital nomads. And increasingly, like, there's just a lot of
mobility in America. Where construction is happening and where people need to be aren't going to match where
people live. And so I think midterm is really pretty early in the ability to go make money there and
have it be sustainable. And there is a big advantage to being early. When you're early, you get better at it.
You get more reviews.
You get more basically social credibility in terms of you're a real operator.
You know, it's going to be, it's going to be easier for Henry to do the next 10 units than it is for somebody do the first 10 units.
But to get in now, you're still got a chance to be ahead of what I'd say was the middle innings of short term rental, which was when it got really professional.
You had to have a professional manager to play.
Increasingly, you saw super smart money like REITs come into business.
You saw people consolidating.
We're not that close to that.
I think we're more like five to 10 years away than three to five.
Are you saying Henry's not smart money, Jeff?
I think Henry is both.
It's hard for me to, he's where the Walton's are from, and they found a way to do pretty well.
They're doing okay.
Yeah.
That's fair.
So one thing I want to talk about, too, is with short-term rentals, people seem to have this mentality of you find a great property.
You deck it out and furnish it, and then you drop it onto a platform.
know, Airbnb, VRBO, and then Magic, your place gets full, right? How is that different in the
midterm rental space? Because I think truly the best midterm rental operators are ones who
leverage the platforms like Furnish Finder, but also go out and beat the streets to generate leads
for their business. And kind of what does that, what does that look like for a successful midterm
rental operator who's using Furnish Finder? You know, first of all, I'd say that approach on short-term rentals
worked four years ago and eight years ago, but probably not today. And so I don't think you can go buy a
place, put it on Airbnb, hope for the best, and you're going to just go cash flow anymore, you know,
second thing, the best property does win. And so if you've got a perfect location, perfect property
that's well appointed, like it's going to rent, like quality rises to the top. And so, but that comes at a
cost. And so it also doesn't always make it the best strategy. I definitely agree midterm rentals is more
of a hustle game. And so, you know, about half of our landlords are only on Furnish Finder,
and those have to really well. When people have a hybrid strategy, Furnish Finder and Airbnb or Verbo as
an example, it's harder to manage the calendar. It's going to be more work to keep it in sync,
but you can yield better because right now in Austin, if you're renting your place for a weekend
where there's a Formula One event and Georgia playing Texas and some huge concerts, it might be
worth a month's rent to somebody to be there for five days. And so there is a yield opportunity
there. On the midterm side, what I see is there are a lot of people who work harder at referrals
or potentially insurance or potentially networking to find these tenants with local companies. And I think
that that's a sophisticated strategy. It all comes down to basically how valuable is your time
and how much of your own time are you willing to put into maximizing that yield. And for some people,
their time's more valuable or they've got different commitments. And so they don't beat the street
as much. They might leave a little bit of occupancy or monthly rate on the table, but it still
might be the best outcome for them. And so we see people on both sides, people who are doing long term
and midterm, people are doing a short term and midterm. I think from where we sit, which is a little
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you should expect that you're going to put more effort into it than a long-term rental or Airbnb.
That's fair, though.
I mean, that's kind of like the whole hustle, reward spectrum, right?
Like, if you're going to put more effort into it, you're going to yield more gains.
If you want to be less involved, you can buy long-term rentals.
You can buy bonds if you want to do nothing.
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Hey folks, welcome back to the show. Let's pick up where we left off. Jeff, I wanted to ask you
a bit about regulation because that's another, sorry, I keep making these parallels to short-term
rentals, but I think for a lot of our audience, it's sort of, we've gone through this timeline
where like everyone was doing rentals, then they were doing the burr, and everyone got super
into short-term rentals. And now a lot of people are moving toward midterm rentals,
largely because there's so much regulation in the short-term rental space. And I'm curious
if there is risk in your mind that mid-term rentals will start being regulated in a similar
fashion. I don't think it's anywhere the same type of risk you see in short term. And so, you know,
in short term, almost every major city has some sort of short term prohibition, you know, on 30 days
or less. And there's different flavors of it. Sometimes it's more, you know, there's a limited number of
licenses where it feels like an old school medallion system. Sometimes they're just flat out illegal.
There's so much basically entrenched government regulation around what a monthly lease is and that it
the long-term clock at 30 days, that it's, I think, a lot harder to go start unwinding that paradigm.
Hotel occupancy tax typically stops at 30 days. You know, you become a long-term tenant.
There's just like tax code things and regulatory things that exist that make this more protected.
But there's also social things. You know, the short-term rental backlash was basically twofold.
One was not in my backyard or there's a party house or a noise nuisance or something that's
making it not feel like a neighborhood. To me, mid-term,
rental mitigates that because like if my family's plumbing bursts in an Austin storm and I want to
stay close to my kids' schools, a midterm rental in my neighborhood is a community asset. It keeps my
family from having to live 10 miles away in corporate housing or not being a part of the community.
And similarly, if someone's trying to move to my neighborhood, a midterm rental is an asset,
it helps encourage people to either get out of a house they're selling and have some flexibility or
potentially explore neighborhood and buy. So I don't think they'll be the same social paranoia around it
that there is in the short-term space. And from a, what does that do to a city? It probably creates
cities that have better liquidity and attract better professionals. Whereas your potential Nashville
or prior Austin example might have been like, there's just a hell of a lot more bachelor parties.
There's just a hell of a lot more groups coming through. And so I think we'll end up being able
to create a market that's a little bit the best of both worlds. Yeah. In most markets where regulation
has happened, typically you can just pivot to a 30-day stay or more. Are you aware of any
markets where 30-day stays even aren't allowed? I think Hawaii might be an example where there
are islands that have 90-day because so many people basically take housing stop off the market for
a summer or a season. But, you know, these are very rare use cases compared to how often you see
30-day restrictions. Do you ever get questions, Jeff, about just housing supply and how midterm
rentals are taking housing supply? Because I totally get the idea that it can be a community asset.
But do you think it is making a meaningful difference in markets where affordability is such a big issue?
I don't think it's making a meaningful difference.
And I think that the starkest differentiator between midterm and short term, you know, well-performing midterm is very frequently still relatively dense housing.
Duplex, quadplex, potentially, you know, a multi-unit building.
You know, it is not the scenario like you've seen in some of the STR dynamics where what happened was affordable house.
became a four bedroom, three bath that sleeps 13 and has a pickleball court.
And so like the dynamics of what make a successful STR also potentially change what people
want to build in a town in a way that reduces the affordable, you know, affordable housing
footprint.
Midterm rentals, I think done well would create more spaces where someone's got an incentive
to build exactly for what Henry's talking about.
You know, Henry's talking about converting long term to midterm.
If people are doing that, you'll see a single family become a quadplex with two long terms and two
midterms or three midterms and a long term or vice versa in a way that you should start to see
housing stock increase because you're solving a mobility issue and you're creating studio through
two bedroom affordable housing much more so than it's a pool and a pickleball court and a movie room
and you're just trying to get somebody to compete on amenities.
Yes, that makes a lot of sense.
since there has been some increased demand like we have talked about and more people are going into the space,
you know, how has this played into any changes you may see within the space going forward?
Are there any innovations coming up that people should be aware of?
Or how is the space evolving?
You know, I think that in terms of midterm competition, you know, it's either Airbnb, you know,
furnish finder, which is more of a classified site, or the long-term players slash Craigslist Facebook
marketplace, which are completely classified sites. I think what you're going to end up needing to see
is that these classified sites need to have an easier booking experience that feels a little more
like Airbnb. And so we're working on things, more sophisticated calendars, better map search
functionality, things that really help someone bridge that gap as a tenant to find a place
that feels more like the way they're used to shopping.
And so I think you'll see technical innovations.
We're committed to trying to keep more control in the hands of the landlord.
So your ability to screen using your own tools, use your own leases, get paid the way you want.
Because it's also, you know, on average for us, it's a $6,000 transaction.
It's three months at $2,000 a month.
We don't think that needs to be taxed 10% like a regular platform.
And we don't think you should have to pay with an AM Extra Visa, which is another 3%.
Like there just isn't enough margin in these businesses.
to go see 13 to 15% evaporate to platforms.
And so I think you'll see the experience get a little bit sharper, like an Airbnb,
but probably it won't get all the way there because landlords actually need to do some
things more manually in order to get the economics to work.
So, Jeff, before we get out of here, as we look to the future of midterm rentals and its
evolution, what's on your mind and what do you think comes next?
You know, again, keying back to, I started at Verbo in 2010.
And so that was the year Airbnb was founded, five years before Furnish Finder was founded.
And so I feel like we're in the early innings of that journey that we saw in short-term rentals.
And there's a few things I expect to happen over the next five to 10 years and why I'm really, you know, optimistic and honestly like really bullish on anyone who's getting into the category as a landlord or owner.
One thing is that, Dave, you talked about how, you know, real estate's always an efficient horizon.
And I think that's always true in the moment.
What's interesting about this is I think the efficient.
for midterm rentals is that there's going to be more demand three years from now than there is supply.
And so getting in now gives you an advantage.
And the reason I say that is this point that there are, you know, initially short term rentals competed with hotels.
And we were just better value and cheaper.
And over time, they started to have to compete on different things, location and amenities and lots of things hotels didn't offer.
Midterm rentals are not there yet.
We're competing on safe, quality space that's cheaper.
And we can do that really well versus the hotels.
And so I think you're going to see, you know, basically more and more demand come into it, people saving money from Airbnb and also people experimenting with it in this housing market.
As that happens, there's going to be a new interesting moment in urban where it's like, who's going to manage all of this?
In general, every major leisure destination, whether it's the outer banks or a mountain town or South Padre, there's three or four property managers who were two or three of the leading brokers in town.
and they started offering this service to basically capture leads and maintain clients and buy sell
processes.
And so what I think you're going to start to see happen is people who are great at managing
midterm rentals are going to have the opportunity to manage them for other people also.
And there's not really that professionalization aspect yet.
Long-term property management is very different than short-term.
And the thing in the middle can be a pretty interesting business.
And there's no one doing it in big urban spots yet.
And really even in mid-cities.
And so you're going to start to see it professionalize, much like short-term.
short term did, but there's going to be a new, needed industry, whether realtors brokers fill it
or whether entrepreneurs and people that are already here fill it, it's going to start to happen.
And as that happens, you'll see more people invest in software tools, more people invest in
distribution. So it's easier to be on a site like ours or a long-term site or a short-term site,
which will bring more demand and start to see the yields go up again. And so I expect that we're,
you know, kind of like if you're a short-term analogy, it feels kind of 2012-ish. And that
Big platforms haven't all figured it out. The demand's starting to come in. And you can still get screaming good deals in some of these smaller towns. You know, you're talking about, you know, buying a single family residence or a duplex for $100,000. If you want to go buy a short-term rental on the lake in Texas, it's $2 million now. It was $500,000 10 years ago. And those things are where this could be really explosive in terms of people getting in early and being there for professionalization and the demand that's about to.
be start coming in more and more over these next 10 years.
Great. Well, thank you so much, Jeff.
We really appreciate your expertise and insights here.
It's been super helpful, very educational.
And, you know, midterm rentals is one of those industries where there's not that much data
or information out there like there is in the rest of the market.
So we really appreciate you bringing this information to us today.
Yeah.
And I'd encourage people to check out our stats page.
It's a good indicator, you know, in addition to our map of what's happening and where
there's more and less demand.
But you've got to pair it with other sources to get it right.
So I wish everybody the best and I hope you all find a midterm rental.
Thank you.
Thanks, chef.
Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
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