Short-Term or Long-Term Rental in Dallas: What the Numbers Show
Verdict: Short-term rental wins — short-term rental grosses roughly 77% more than long-term rental, though higher operating costs reduce the net advantage considerably.
Best For: Cash flow investors willing to manage guest turnover, or hands-off landlords seeking steady long-term rental income in affordable suburbs.
Scores out of 10 across yield, regulations, tax, risk, and market fundamentals. How we score
Underlying Assumptions (data as of April 2026):
- Property Price: 3-bedroom houses estimated at around $403,492
- Monthly Long-Term Rent: Approximately $1,727
- Short-Term Rental Nightly Rate: Around $222 per night (varies seasonally)
- Assumed Short-Term Rental Occupancy: 50% average across the region (varies significantly between specific locations)
- Available Short-Term Rental Nights: 330 per year (assumes 35 days for cleaning, changeovers, and maintenance)
- Regulations: Permissive. Texas state law prevents cities from banning short-term rentals outright. Permit required (approximately $404). Hotel occupancy tax of 6.0% state rate plus 6.25% sales tax applies.
See your neighborhood's full short-term rental vs long-term rental breakdown in the dashboard
Estimates for a typical 3-bedroom house. Figures are modelled from market data; not guaranteed outcomes.
Dallas County's median 3-bedroom house price of $403,492 sits well above both the Texas median of $258,699 and the national median of $260,430. However, rents also track higher at $1,727 per month compared to $1,189 statewide and $1,068 nationally. The result is a gross rental yield of 5.1%, compared to 5.5% across Texas and 4.9% nationally. Dallas's higher entry cost is partially offset by stronger rents, keeping yields roughly in line with broader benchmarks.
For investors comparing Dallas to other Texas metros, the dashboard lets you run side-by-side comparisons with specific suburbs in each market. San Antonio and Houston typically offer lower entry prices but also lower rents; the yield trade-off depends on the specific neighbourhood.
Investment Bottom Line: Short-Term Rental Wins on Revenue, Suburbs Determine the Real Return
Dallas County is a strong market for both short-term and long-term rental strategies. Short-term rental generates substantially more gross revenue, but after accounting for platform fees, management, insurance, and higher maintenance, the net advantage narrows. The real differentiator is not the county-wide average; it is which suburb you buy in.
The spread between the highest-yielding suburb (Oak Cliff/North (75203) at 10.3%) and a mid-range suburb (Mesquite (75181) at 7.9%) is far wider than the gap between short-term and long-term rental strategies at the county level. That makes suburb selection the most consequential decision, ahead of which rental strategy you pursue.
Texas's no-ban state law and absence of state income tax make Dallas one of the more investor-friendly markets in the country. Combined with a low break-even occupancy of 28%, short-term rental operators have a wide margin of safety here. For investors who prefer simplicity, long-term rental still delivers a competitive gross yield of 5.1% with far less operational complexity.
| Investor Type | Fit |
|---|---|
| Cash Flow Focused | Good |
| Appreciation Focused | Good |
| Short-Term Rental Operator | Excellent |
| High Leverage (80%+ LTV) | Fair |
Data reflects market conditions as of April 2026. For the most current figures and to model a specific property, explore the Dallas dashboard. You can also review our data sources and market score methodology for details on how these figures are calculated.
See your neighborhood's full short-term rental vs long-term rental breakdown
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This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.