Investor Tools

Orlando STR revenue estimator.

Select your target market and property size to model gross revenue, net income, and yield. Numbers are based on current AirDNA occupancy and ADR data across Orlando's nine most active STR submarkets.

Property details

Highest-volume STR market in FL. Golf resort communities, strong Disney demand. HOA STR-friendly.

$

Estimated annual performance

Gross Revenue

$99,414

Net Income

$70,031

Gross Yield

18.1%

Net Yield

12.7%

Avg daily rate

$378

Nights booked/yr

263 nights

Occupancy rate

72.0%

Note: Revenue estimates are based on market-level AirDNA and Mashvisor data for Orlando STR submarkets (2025–2026). Actual performance varies by property condition, amenities, listing quality, seasonality, and local regulations. Expenses shown exclude mortgage, property tax, HOA, and major capital items. This tool is for investment screening — not a financial guarantee. Verify local STR ordinances before purchase.

Understanding STR yields in Orlando

What the numbers mean for investors.

The Reunion and Davenport markets consistently outperform the metro on gross revenue because they were purpose-built for the vacation rental business — HOAs explicitly permit STR, management companies are established, and the Disney demand driver doesn't have an off season. The tradeoff is higher competition and more supply coming online.

Lake Nona and Dr. Phillips offer lower peak ADRs but stronger mid-week occupancy from medical and corporate extended-stay demand. A 4BR in Lake Nona running 60% occupancy with mostly 7–14 night stays has meaningfully lower turnover cost than the same property in Reunion running 72% with 3-night average stays. Net yield can converge even when gross revenue diverges.

The regulatory question matters more than the revenue estimate. Orange County requires a Tourist Development Tax (TDT) license. Several municipalities within the county (Winter Garden, Maitland) have additional restrictions. Before buying in any specific community, verify both the county ordinance and the HOA CC&Rs — one can permit what the other prohibits.