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STR vs. LTR: Which Actually Costs More?
Property Management & Operations
Mar 21, 2026
4 min read

STR vs. LTR: Which Actually Costs More?

The revenue numbers get a lot of attention. The expense side is where most investors get surprised. It's easy to run the revenue m...

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Emmanuel Santos
Content Writer
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The revenue numbers get a lot of attention. The expense side is where most investors get surprised. 


It's easy to run the revenue math on a short-term rental. You look up what similar properties are charging per night, estimate occupancy, and work backward from there. The numbers usually look good. 

The expense side is where things get more complicated. STRs and long-term rentals have very different cost structures, and the gap between them is bigger than most people expect going in. 

Nobody puts "cleaning fees for 48 guest check-outs" in their initial spreadsheet. They should. 

Here's a straight comparison. 

What costs more with STR

Short-term rentals carry a higher operating cost per dollar earned. That's not a reason to avoid them, but it's something to plan for. 

Furnishings and setup. LTR tenants bring their own furniture. STR guests don't. A three-bedroom property can run $6,000 to $12,000 to furnish at a quality level that supports good reviews. That's a one-time cost, but it's a real one. 

Cleaning. Every guest turnover requires a professional clean. If you're averaging three to four turnovers a month, you're looking at $150 to $250 per clean depending on property size and your market. On a busy property, cleaning costs alone can run $600 to $1,000 per month. 

Utilities. With LTR, tenants typically pay utilities. With STR, you do. Budget for electricity, water, internet, and streaming services to be fully in your column. 

Supplies. Toiletries, paper goods, coffee, dish soap, trash bags. Guests go through more than you'd think. Most STR hosts budget $30 to $80 per turnover for consumables. 

Platform fees. Airbnb charges hosts 3% on most bookings. VRBO's structure varies. These come straight off revenue. 

STR insurance. Covered in a separate article, but STR-specific policies add roughly $100 to $200 per month compared to a standard landlord policy. 

What costs more with LTR

LTR isn't necessarily cheaper once you account for the full picture. 

Vacancy. When an LTR tenant leaves, you may sit empty for weeks while you find a replacement. One month vacant on a $2,500 rent property costs you $2,500. STR vacancies are shorter and more predictable by season. 

Tenant damage. Long-term tenants can cause significant wear. Security deposits often don't cover full repair costs, and eviction proceedings, if needed, are expensive and slow. 

Lower gross revenue. In most markets, a well-managed STR will out-earn an LTR on the same property by 20% to 50% or more, depending on location and seasonality. The higher operating cost of STR is often offset by that revenue difference. 

The honest version of the comparison

Consider an investor who's been running a long-term rental for five years. The property cash-flows reliably. The tenants are consistent. The workload is manageable. The question isn't whether LTR works. It clearly does. The question is whether switching to STR, or adding a second STR property, produces enough additional net income to justify the higher operational complexity. 

STR costs more to run. LTR is simpler but earns less. Which one makes sense depends on your market, your property type, and how much operational involvement you want. 

In high-demand STR markets, the revenue premium usually justifies the higher cost. In slower markets, or if you want a truly hands-off investment, LTR may make more financial sense. The question worth asking isn't which is cheaper overall. It's which one produces better net income for your specific property once all costs are counted. 

How HostDesk Can Help

HostDesk's Feasibility and Readiness Evaluation pulls revenue context from your local market so you can compare STR and LTR projections side by side. Koli walks you through the inputs specific to your address and flags the variables that matter most for your property type and location. You see your actual numbers, not averages pulled from a city three states away. 

You make the call with a complete picture in front of you. 

Get started free at thehostdesk.com. 

Related Knowledge Base Articles:

  • Do You Actually Need a Permit to List on Airbnb? 
  • STR Insurance vs. Standard Homeowner's Policy: What's the Difference? 
  • Dynamic Pricing Explained for New Hosts 
  • The Go-Live Checklist: What to Complete Before Your First Booking 
  • What Is an STR Readiness Inspection and Do You Need One? 

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