Airbnb Profitability Calculator
Analyze potential returns of a short-term rental property. Calculate Cash Flow, Cap Rate, and Cash-on-Cash Return based on occupancy and expenses.
| Occupancy | Gross Revenue / mo | Total Expenses / mo | Net Cash Flow / mo | Annual NOI | CoC Return | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculate to see scenarios | ||||||
Calculate to see scenarios
How to Use the Airbnb Profitability Calculator
Getting a complete profitability picture takes about two minutes. Enter your property details, realistic revenue assumptions, and monthly expenses — the calculator instantly shows you cash flow, cap rate, cash-on-cash return, and a full occupancy sensitivity table.
Enter Property & Loan Details
Start with the purchase price, your down payment, furnishing budget, interest rate, and loan term. The calculator uses these to compute your monthly mortgage payment and your total cash invested — which is the denominator for your cash-on-cash return. Use the interest rate slider to model different financing scenarios quickly.
Set Your Revenue Assumptions
Enter your average nightly rate (ADR), expected occupancy rate, and cleaning fee per stay. For the most accurate projections, research comparable listings on Airbnb directly or use a market data tool like AirDNA or Rabbu. Be conservative — most new hosts project occupancy 10–15 percentage points too high in year one. Use the occupancy slider to instantly see results at different booking levels.
Fill In All Monthly Expenses
The biggest mistake in STR analysis is underestimating costs. Enter management or platform fees, utilities, STR insurance, supplies, property tax, HOA, and any other recurring costs. Enable the 5% vacancy and maintenance buffer — this reserve is essential for realistic projections and covers unexpected repair calls, unbooked nights between stays, and seasonal slow periods.
Analyze Results & Download the PDF Report
The results panel shows your CoC return (color-coded green, amber, or red), full monthly cash flow breakdown, 6 key figures, two charts, and an occupancy sensitivity table from 30% to 90%. Open the accordion to see exactly how your returns change at each occupancy level. Download the two-page PDF to share with a lender, partner, or financial advisor — it includes all inputs, metrics, and the full sensitivity analysis.
What This Calculator Shows You
Most Airbnb income estimators show you gross revenue and stop there. This calculator gives you the full investment picture — real net cash flow after all expenses, three profitability metrics used by professional real estate investors, visual breakdowns, and a report you can take to your lender.
Cash-on-Cash Return — Hero Metric
The results panel leads with CoC return — the annualized return on your total cash invested, including down payment, furnishing, and closing costs. This is the most relevant metric for STR investors because it directly measures the return on money out of pocket, rather than the property’s total value. Color-coded green (≥8%), amber (4–8%), or red (<4%) at a glance.
Full Monthly Cash Flow Breakdown
A detailed 11-line income and expense statement shows every cost individually: rental revenue, cleaning fee income, management fee, utilities, insurance, supplies, property tax and HOA, vacancy buffer, and mortgage P&I. Net monthly cash flow appears at the bottom in green (positive) or red (negative) — giving you full transparency into where money is going.
6-Card Key Figures Summary
At-a-glance summary cards display annual cash flow, net operating income, cap rate, total cash invested, annual gross revenue, and gross yield — all updated in real time. Cap rate and gross yield allow you to compare this property against other investment types and against long-term rental alternatives on a standardized basis.
Revenue vs. Expenses Bar Chart
A three-bar comparison chart visualises total monthly income, total monthly expenses (including mortgage), and net monthly cash flow side by side. Color-coded bars make the income-to-cost ratio immediately clear — and the cash flow bar changes from blue to red when the property operates at a loss, providing an instant visual signal to revisit your assumptions.
Monthly Cost Distribution Doughnut Chart
A doughnut chart breaks down how your total monthly costs are distributed across seven expense categories: mortgage, management fees, utilities, insurance, supplies, tax and HOA, and vacancy reserve. This helps you immediately identify which cost category dominates your expense structure and where optimization efforts would have the highest impact on net returns.
Occupancy Sensitivity Table + 2-Page PDF
The accordion sensitivity table models 11 occupancy scenarios from 30% to 90%, showing income, expenses, cash flow, NOI, and CoC return for each — with your current occupancy highlighted in blue. Download the two-page PDF to share with lenders or partners: Page 1 covers your full profitability analysis and charts; Page 2 contains the complete sensitivity table and expense detail breakdown.
Airbnb & STR Investing — By the Numbers
How Different Investors Use This Calculator
Whether you’re evaluating your first Airbnb purchase, auditing an existing listing’s performance, or comparing short-term vs. long-term rental strategies, the numbers you need to focus on differ by situation. Here’s how three investor profiles approach this analysis.
The First-Time STR Buyer
Pre-purchase due diligenceYou’ve found a property in a popular market and want to know if the Airbnb income projections pencil out before making an offer. You’ve seen the gross revenue estimates — now you need to see what actually lands in your pocket after all costs.
- Start conservative: enter 55% occupancy even if market data shows 65–70% — year-one performance is almost always below stabilized averages
- Don’t skip the furnishing cost input — it’s real cash out of pocket that reduces your CoC return
- Open the occupancy sensitivity table and find the break-even occupancy — the minimum rate at which the property covers all expenses
- Check that your CoC return beats a comparable long-term rental in the same market before committing to the active management demands of STR
The Existing Host Auditing Returns
Performance review & optimizationYou’ve been hosting for 12–24 months and want to objectively measure whether your Airbnb is actually performing well — or just feeling busy. Revenue is coming in but you’re not sure if it’s actually producing a meaningful return on your invested capital.
- Enter your actual trailing 12-month average nightly rate and occupancy for a realistic baseline, not your goals
- Include every real expense you’ve paid in the last year, including one-time repairs amortized monthly
- Compare your actual CoC return against the 8% benchmark — if you’re below 4%, the property may be working harder for guests than for your portfolio
- Use the expense distribution chart to identify your largest cost category — management fees and utilities are often the highest-leverage items to reduce
The STR vs. LTR Evaluator
Comparing rental strategiesYou own or are buying a property and need to decide whether short-term or long-term rental produces better risk-adjusted returns. STR looks more lucrative on paper, but you want to account for the higher costs, active management, and occupancy risk before committing to the Airbnb model.
- Model both scenarios: run this calculator for STR at 60% occupancy, then calculate LTR using your projected market rent minus a standard 10% management fee
- The CoC spread between STR and LTR should be at least 3–4 percentage points to justify the added management complexity and income volatility of short-term rental
- Factor in regulatory risk: markets with strong STR restrictions may force a sudden switch to LTR — check local ordinances before assuming STR is a permanent option
- Use cap rate to compare against LTR on a financing-neutral basis — STR cap rates should significantly exceed LTR cap rates to justify the operational overhead
7 Things to Know Before Buying an Airbnb Property
Short-term rental investing has unique risks that don’t show up in gross income projections. These seven factors separate profitable STR investors from ones who are surprised by the gap between expected and actual returns.
Research Local STR Regulations Before You Buy
Short-term rental regulations are the single largest external risk to an Airbnb investment. Cities from New York to Denver to Scottsdale have implemented permit requirements, owner-occupancy rules, nightly caps, or outright bans on non-owner-occupied STRs. Research the zoning code, any pending ordinances, and HOA restrictions for any property before purchase — an unenforceable STR license can turn a strong Airbnb into a mandatory long-term rental overnight.
Use Actual Market Data for Your Nightly Rate and Occupancy
The most common modeling mistake is using the maximum achievable nightly rate and peak occupancy instead of realistic averages. Tools like AirDNA, Rabbu, and AllTheRooms provide market-level ADR and occupancy data for specific neighborhoods. For this calculator, use the trailing 12-month average for comparable listings — not the top 10% of performers or the seasonal peak. Conservative inputs produce a margin of safety; optimistic inputs produce disappointment.
STR Insurance Is Not Optional — And It’s Not Cheap
Standard homeowners insurance policies do not cover commercial short-term rental activity. Airbnb’s AirCover provides limited host protection but has significant exclusions. A dedicated short-term rental policy from providers like Proper Insurance, Steadily, or CBIZ typically costs $150–$400 per month depending on property size, location, and coverage. This cost must be included in your expense model — running without it exposes you to uncovered liability and property damage claims.
Account for Seasonality in Your Occupancy Estimate
Most STR markets have significant seasonal demand swings. A beachfront property that runs at 85% occupancy in summer may drop to 35% in the off-season — producing an annual average of 60%. A mountain ski market may flip this pattern entirely. Before using an average occupancy figure, model your best and worst months separately to understand whether cash flow will cover mortgage and fixed expenses during slow periods. The sensitivity table in this calculator helps you identify the occupancy floor your property needs to stay cash flow positive.
Budget for Furnishings as Part of Your Investment, Not an Afterthought
A complete furnishing budget for a 2-bedroom Airbnb — including furniture, bedding, kitchen equipment, décor, and photography — typically runs $12,000–$25,000. This is real upfront capital that reduces your cash-on-cash return and should be entered in the furnishing cost field so the calculator accurately computes your total cash invested. Properties with higher-quality furnishings and professional photography typically command 15–25% higher nightly rates and achieve better occupancy — making the investment recoverable within 12–18 months in most active markets.
Self-Management vs. Property Management: Model Both
Self-managing an Airbnb saves the 20–30% management fee but requires significant active time — typically 5–15 hours per week for a single property, including guest communication, maintenance coordination, and restocking. A professional co-host or property manager converts the STR into a more passive investment but significantly impacts returns. Use the management fee slider in this calculator to directly compare self-managed and managed scenarios — and factor in a realistic value for your own time when evaluating the self-management option.
Occupancy Tax and Income Tax Affect Your Real Return
Most U.S. jurisdictions require STR hosts to collect and remit occupancy or transient lodging tax — ranging from 4% to 14% of gross revenue depending on the state and municipality. While Airbnb collects this automatically in many markets, the obligation and compliance burden fall on the host. Additionally, STR income is subject to federal and state income tax, though depreciation, mortgage interest, and operating expenses are deductible as business expenses. Consult a CPA familiar with STR taxation before your first booking — especially regarding the 14-day personal use rule and the material participation test for Schedule E vs. Schedule C treatment.
Airbnb Profitability — FAQ
Real questions from investors evaluating short-term rental properties — answered plainly.
Important disclaimer: All calculations provided by this tool are for educational and estimation purposes only and do not constitute financial, investment, or real estate advice. Results are based on the inputs you provide and standard real estate return formulas. Actual Airbnb income varies significantly by market, seasonality, property condition, host reviews, local regulation, and platform algorithm changes. Revenue and occupancy projections do not guarantee future performance. Operating expense estimates may not reflect your actual costs. Figures shown do not account for income tax liability, depreciation recapture, capital gains, occupancy/lodging tax obligations, or transaction costs associated with buying or selling the property. Always conduct independent market research, obtain professional property management quotes, consult a licensed real estate professional, and seek advice from a qualified CPA or financial advisor before making any investment decision. HomeExpertly is not a licensed real estate broker, property manager, or financial advisor.
