Owner Resources

Rental Pricing Strategy Guide

Pricing your rental correctly is one of the most important decisions you'll make as a landlord. This guide explains what drives rental prices and how to avoid the most common mistakes.

What Drives Your Rental Price

The Factors That Determine What Your Property Should Rent For

Rental pricing is not arbitrary — it is driven by market data, property condition, location, and competition. Understanding these factors helps you price with confidence.

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Location & Submarket

The neighborhood, school district, proximity to employment centers, and access to amenities all have a direct impact on what renters are willing to pay. Two identical properties in different zip codes can rent for dramatically different amounts.

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Comparable Rentals (Comps)

What are similar properties renting for right now? Active listings and recently rented comparables in your area are the most reliable indicators of where your rental price should sit. This is what a rental analysis looks at.

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Market Conditions & Seasonality

Rental demand fluctuates throughout the year. Spring and early summer typically see stronger demand. Market vacancy rates, local economic conditions, and new construction inventory all affect how quickly your property will rent and at what price.

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Property Condition & Features

Updated kitchens, modern bathrooms, in-unit laundry, and quality finishes command higher rents. A well-maintained, move-in ready property will outperform a similar property in poor condition — even in the same neighborhood.

Common Pricing Mistakes

Pricing Too High or Too Low Both Cost You Money

Most landlords assume the risk only runs one direction. It doesn't — underpricing is just as costly as overpricing when you look at the full picture.

⚠️ Pricing Too High

Extended Vacancy Costs More Than You Think

Every week your property sits empty is lost income you can never recover. A property priced $200 over market that sits for 6 extra weeks costs $1,200+ in lost rent — far more than the premium you were trying to capture.

  • Fewer inquiries and showings
  • Longer days on market signals something is wrong
  • Eventually forced to reduce price anyway
  • Attracts lower quality applicants over time
↓ Pricing Too Low

Underpricing Leaves Real Money Behind

Pricing below market fills the property fast but locks you into a lease at a rate that may be difficult to recover from at renewal. Over a 12-month lease, even $100/month below market is $1,200 left on the table.

  • Immediate income loss compounded over the lease
  • Renewal negotiations start from a lower baseline
  • Can signal low quality to prospective tenants
  • Harder to raise price at renewal without pushback
Days on Market

What Days on Market Is Actually Telling You

Days on market is one of the clearest signals in the rental market. Knowing how to read it helps you adjust before a vacancy becomes a problem.

0–7 Days — Priced Right or Below Market

If your property rents in the first week with multiple applications, you may be priced at or slightly below market. That's not necessarily a problem — but at renewal, you should evaluate whether you can bring the price up to market rate.

7–21 Days — Healthy Market Position

A property that receives consistent inquiries and rents within 2–3 weeks is generally priced correctly for the market. This is the sweet spot — competitive without leaving money behind.

21–45 Days — Time to Evaluate

If you are past three weeks with limited inquiries or showings, the market is signaling that your price may be above what tenants are willing to pay. A price adjustment of even $50–$100 can reinvigorate interest.

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45+ Days — Priced Out of the Market

Extended vacancy at 45+ days almost always points to a pricing problem. By this point the listing has lost freshness, tenant interest has passed, and a meaningful reduction is typically needed to reset momentum.

Free Rental Analysis

Request Your Free Rental Price Analysis

Not sure what your property should rent for? Submit your property details and our team will review local market data and provide a rental pricing recommendation — at no cost.

Thinking About Hiring a Property Manager?

Managing Rental Property Is More Than Collecting Rent

Rental pricing is just one part of the equation. Once your property is rented, managing tenant communications, maintenance requests, lease renewals, inspections, and compliance becomes an ongoing responsibility. We handle all of it.

Learn About Our Services
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