The management fee percentage is only useful when you know what it includes, what gets billed separately and what the property keeps at the end.
A lower percentage can look better on paper and still cost more in practice. The right question is what the property earns, what work is included and what the owner keeps after the full picture is counted
The number most owners notice first. Useful, but incomplete by itself.
The part that decides whether pricing, guest experience and local follow-up are actually managed.
What remains after the fee, operating costs, owner time, maintenance reality and missed revenue.
Then compare operating costs, owner-use impact, maintenance reality, extra charges and the work needed to reach the number.
A fee only means something when you know what sits behind it. A manager charging 20% with routine work included is not the same as a lower percentage with separate charges around the edges.
Looks cheaper when the percentage is viewed alone.
Judged together with service, coverage and owner result.
May be handled partly by the owner or billed as separate add-ons.
Included in the stated management structure.
May still depend on a separate cleaner, handyman or owner network.
Coordinated around the property through local follow-up.
Fee percentage only.
Net result after revenue, fee, operating costs and service coverage.
WORTH KNOWING
A low headline fee can become more expensive once routine tasks are charged separately. Before comparing managers, ask for the full cost structure.
Ask whether onboarding, listing setup, copy and photography coordination are included or billed once.
Ask whether post-stay checks are standard or charged per checkout.
Ask whether contractor invoices are passed through at cost or marked up.
Ask whether linens, towels and replacement items are included, billed per stay or billed as needed.
Ask whether owner statements, reporting or account administration have their own fee.
Ask whether the fee includes multi-channel support or only limited remote support.
A remote listing service, self-management and local full-service management solve different problems. The cheapest option is only cheaper if it still protects revenue, response time and property condition.
No management fee, but the owner carries pricing, messages, cleaner coordination, local issues and follow-up.
Lower fee, but physical management, local response and routine property work may still sit outside the service.
Higher headline involvement, but the fee should support revenue management, guest handling and property coordination.
Self-management can look cheaper because there is no fee. The real cost often sits in missed pricing opportunities, slower responses, platform dependence and owner time.
Adjusted occasionally, often after bookings slow down.
Adjusted around demand, season, gaps and booking pace.
Often noticed after the month has already passed.
Watched early, so gaps can still be priced and positioned.
Usually judged by occupancy or payout alone.
Judged by rate quality, booking pace, season and owner return.
Dependent on personal availability, attention and follow-up.
Daily work is structured, delegated and reported back clearly.
WHERE TO GO NEXT
Rates are adjusted around season, demand, booking pace, gaps and lead time.
The property is positioned with clear information across the right channels.
Questions, check-in details and in-stay support are handled before, during and after the stay.
Cleaning and post-stay follow-up are coordinated between reservations.
Local issues are coordinated without turning every problem into owner work.
Statements and performance visibility help the owner judge the actual result.
WHERE TO GO NEXT
Use the calculator for a first rental income indication, or go to the property review page if you want fee, service and expected performance compared for your own home