STR Viability

Definition:

STR Viability is the long-term ability of a property to function as a short-term rental based on the interaction of seasonality, regulation, property design, and operational burden.

It is not whether short-term rentals are allowed.
It is whether the property sustains performance over time.

Where It Shows Up:

  • Vacation homes marketed as income-producing
  • Properties near Traverse City tourism demand
  • Waterfront and near-water properties in Leelanau County
  • Multi-unit or flexible-use properties

Why It Matters:

STR Viability determines whether a property:

  • offsets ownership costs
  • maintains consistent bookings
  • remains operational over time

Most STR properties fail at the operational level, not the regulatory level.

Typical pattern:

  • Year 1: learning curve, inconsistent bookings
  • Year 2: partial optimization, often still not cash flowing
  • Year 3: operational fatigue or stabilization

This changes how a property must be evaluated.

Northern Michigan Context:

In areas like Northport and Suttons Bay:

  • revenue is concentrated in summer months
  • off-season demand drops significantly
  • annual performance depends on peak season execution

Constraints include:

  • HOA restrictions that override township rules
  • distance from water, town centers, and amenities
  • management logistics in rural settings

A property can be legally eligible for STR use and still have low long-term viability.

Related Concepts:

Decision Impact:

This concept should be applied before purchase, not after.

It changes how properties are filtered, not just how they are understood.