How to Evaluate STR Funds as a First-Time Passive Investor

If you’re a high-income professional, STR funds (short-term rental funds) are pitched as a way to get “Airbnb income” without ever answering a guest message. That can be true. But wiring $50k–$250k into a private fund you barely understand isn’t passive investing, it’s a blind trust.
If we were sitting across the table and you asked, “How do I know if this STR fund is any good?”, I’d walk you through five things:
- What you’re actually buying
- Who’s running it
- How realistic the underwriting is
- How the fees and taxes work
- Whether it fits your overall plan
Let’s go through those one by one.
1. Know What an STR Fund Really Is
“STR fund” is a broad label. Under the hood, a fund might:
- buy and operate a portfolio of vacation rentals directly,
- partner with local operators under a revenue-share model, or
- buy into other syndications, and STR deals as a “fund of funds.”
At a basic level, you’re getting exposure to the vacation rental market, which has grown into a global industry worth roughly $88–100 billion and is projected to keep growing at around 3–5% annually over the next decade.
Demand has been strong as travelers choose non-hotel stays, and global STR listings have expanded quickly by about 12.8% in 2023, with guest capacity still rising.
That growth is the opportunity. But more supply and more competition are also risks. So your first question is simple:
“What exactly does this fund buy, and how does it make money in a crowded STR market?”
If the answer is mostly buzzwords and screenshots of Airbnb dashboards, that’s a red flag.
2. Check That STR Risk Matches Your Goals
Short-term rentals live at the intersection of travel demand, local regulation, and operating skill. A few data points to keep in mind:
- U.S. STR demand grew about 6.8% year-over-year in 2024, helping push revenue per available listing (RevPAR) higher after a soft patch.
- At the same time, the average U.S. occupancy rate has hovered around 50–54% as supply has grown. Strong operators in good markets can hit the 70–80% range; weaker, oversupplied markets can sit in the 30s.
- In many destinations, regulators are tightening rules or even capping STR supply to protect local housing, and that trend is likely to continue.
That mix explains why STRs can be high-cash-flow but lumpy. A good fund should be honest about that.
Ask:
- Which markets are you in, such as primary, secondary, or drive-to leisure markets?
- How are you managing regulation risk? Are your properties fully permitted and compliant?
- How did these markets perform through 2023–2025 as supply surged and rules tightened?
If the pitch is “we buy anywhere tourism is hot,” with no nuanced view of regulation and competition, be careful.
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3. Underwrite the Manager Before You Underwrite the Fund
In a private STR fund, you are a limited partner (LP). You are not the operator. So the main asset you’re buying is the team.
Drill into four things:
- Operating track record
- How many STRs have they actually run, for how long, and with what occupancy, average daily rate (ADR), and RevPAR?
- Have they gone through at least one full cycle of boom, oversupply, and regulation changes?
- Systems and technology
Strong STR operators lean on dynamic pricing tools, channel management, and guest-experience systems. In one recent review, about 40% of STR hosts increased both occupancy and ADR in a season by using better pricing tech and operational systems.
- Ask which tools they use and how they benchmark performance.
- Fund alignment
- What are the acquisition fees, asset management fees, and promoters (profit splits)?
- How much of their own capital is co-invested in the fund?
- Communication
- How often do you get reporting? Monthly? Quarterly?
- Do they share full P&Ls by property, or just high-level portfolio summaries?
If you wouldn’t be comfortable owning a single STR 50/50 with this team, you probably shouldn’t be their limited partner across 50 properties either.
4. Pressure-Test the Assumptions, Not Just the IRR
Most STR funds marketed to passive real estate investing for accredited investors highlight:
- target cash yield (for example, 6–8% once stabilized),
- projected IRR over a 5–10 year hold, and
- an equity multiple (e.g., 1.8x–2.2x).
Those are outputs. You care about inputs, especially in a sector where performance swings:
- Average full-time STR listings in the U.S. generate around $46,000 in annual gross revenue, but results vary widely by market and property type.
- Demand has grown, but supply has grown faster in many markets, which means hosts need sharper pricing and differentiation to maintain margins.
Ask the manager to walk you through, line by line:
- Occupancy assumptions are whether they are underwriting below current market averages or assuming they’ll “crush it” from day one.
- ADR growth, are they assuming inflation-plus, or big jumps that depend on perfect reviews and ever-increasing travel demand?
- Expense load includes cleaning, turnover, platform fees, insurance, and local taxes. STRs carry more line items than long-term rentals.
Then ask a simple follow-up:
“Show me what happens if occupancy and ADR are both 10–15% lower than your base case. What do my cash flows and IRR look like then?”
Good operators already have those downside cases modeled. Bad ones change the subject.
5. Understand Fees, Taxes, and 401(k) Money
Fees
Private funds typically layer several fees:
- acquisition fees when they buy properties,
- Ongoing asset/management fees,
- refinance or disposition fees, and
- a promote (carried interest) once investors hit a preferred return.
Fees aren’t evil; they pay for a professional team and real operations. But the split should feel fair. If the sponsor is getting rich on fees even when performance is average, think twice.
Taxes and Depreciation
From a tax standpoint, STR funds are still real estate:
- You share in rental income and depreciation, which can shelter a good portion of your cash distributions.
- Many funds use cost segregation to accelerate depreciation on furniture, fixtures, and improvements. Independent tax analyses show that accelerated depreciation can create meaningful paper losses in the early years, even when cash flow is positive, which is attractive for high earners with other passive income to offset.
You’ll get a K-1 each year. Hand it to your CPA and ask how those losses actually impact your situation.
401(K) And Retirement Funds
If you’re wondering how to convert 401k to a real estate investment, you’re really asking about options like:
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- rolling to a self-directed IRA or solo 401(k), then
- investing through that account into the fund.
This can be powerful, but it introduces extra moving parts: prohibited-transaction rules, potential UBIT/UDFI if leverage is involved, and custodian fees. That’s where a good CPA and custodian are non-negotiable.
6. A Simple Checklist Before You Wire Money
Before you send a dollar to any STR fund, you should be able to answer “yes” to these:
- Clarity: I can explain, in a few sentences, what this fund buys, where it invests, and how it makes money.
- Trust: I understand the manager’s track record, how they’re paid, and how much of their own capital is at risk.
- Reality check: I’ve seen downside cases with lower occupancy and ADR, not just a rosy base case.
- Fit: My CPA has looked at the structure, including how depreciation and any retirement-account investing will affect me personally.
- Sleep test: If I never saw another glossy deck and only got quarterly PDF updates, I’d still be comfortable owning this exposure for 7–10 years.
If any of those are a “no,” slow down. In private real estate, missing a good deal is fine; forcing yourself into the wrong one is expensive.

Ready for the Next Step?
Short-term rental funds can be a solid tool for accredited and sophisticated investors seeking real estate-backed income without another job, provided the manager, markets, and underwriting make sense.
At LV5 Capital, we focus on creative finance and syndication in cash-flowing, recession-resistant niches like mobile home parks, RV parks, and select income-producing assets in the Midwest and targeted U.S. markets. Our job is to do the heavy lifting on deal structure, operations, and risk management so you don’t have to.
If you’d like a second set of eyes on a potential STR fund, or you want to see how our own deals are structured, you can learn more and join our investor club at https://lv5capital.com/.



















