Nick Gerli Profile picture
Jun 27, 2023 13 tweets 4 min read Read on X
The Airbnb collapse is real.

Revenues are down nearly 50% in cities like Phoenix and Austin.

Watch out for a wave of forced selling from Airbnb owners later this year in the areas hit hardest by the revenue collapse.
1) What's scary for the US Housing Market is just how many Airbnbs there are.

Data from AllTheRooms shows 1 million Airbnb / VRBO rentals.

Compared to only 570k homes for sale.

Creates huge home price downside if struggling Airbnb owners elect to sell.
2) Ground zero for this Airbnb collapse is a city like PHOENIX.

Where the number of short-term rentals (18k) is more than DOUBLE the number of for sale listings (8k).

Mix the huge Airbnb supply with revenues down -50% and you get a cocktail for massive forced selling.
3) Another area with huge exposure is Eastern Tennessee.

Particularly a vacation town called Sevierville in the Smokey Mountains.

In this county there's 10x as many Airbnbs as homes listed for sale. While the revenue per owner is down nearly 50%.

Yikes.
4) Another area to watch out for is Central Texas.

Data from AllTheRooms shows that Airbnb revenues are down 40-50% yoy across most of the area.

Particularly in Austin, San Antonio, Uvalde.
5) Another area that is getting smoked by the Airbnb Crash is the Pacific Northwest / Mountain Region.

States like Montana, Idaho, and Oregon.

Fewer people playing out their Yellowstone fantasies + way more supply = 40% declines in revenue per listing.
6) And ultimately this Airbnb crash was to be expected.

The pandemic is over. Fewer people are working from home / vacationing in states like Montana, Texas, and Tennessee.

So the demand is way down. Just as the Airbnb supply went way up. So you get a crash.
7) What will be interesting is how "stubborn" Airbnb owners are in holding their properties.

Many of them are just now seeing their revenues down 50%.

But the mainstream narrative hasn't caught up to it yet. So owners might not realize the Airbnb crash is a broader trend.
8) Some Airbnb owners might elect to do a long-term rental in their properties instead.

But the problem with that is that there has already been a huge surge in long-term rentals hitting the market.

With vacant rentals in cities like Nashville exploding over the last year.
9) So if Airbnb owners "pivot" to long-term rentals, they'll likely crash that market as well.

Especially in dense urban areas. Which is where the majority of Airbnbs are located.

Check out the Airbnb heatmap in a metro like Phoenix to see areas with most exposure.
10) I think "newbie" Airbnb owners who bought over the last 1-2 years with a mortgage are in trouble.

They got in at a high price. And have a high monthly payment. And little margin for error.

They could be some of the first to sell later in 2023 when the season ends.
11) However, some of the more seasoned Airbnb operators who got in before the pandemic likely have room to work with.

They paid less for their Airbnb. Have a cheaper mortgage rate. And more experience.

They will be less inclined to sell.
12) I'll have more content and data on the Airbnb crash in coming weeks.

The data used in this Tweet thread came from AllTheRooms. They're a short-term rental data provider who tracks Airbnb supply, rates, and revenue for every market in the country.

alltherooms.com

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More from @nickgerli1

Mar 6
Las Vegas apartment vacancies are spiking.

And landlords are not happy.

7.6% of Vegas apartments are now sitting vacant, the highest level in nearly 10 years.

(Triple the pandemic low of 2.4%).

4 years ago, rents were soaring, and there was no availability.

Now they're cutting rents aggressively and giving concessions just to get tenants through the door.

A potentially ominous sign for Vegas' overall housing market in 2026.Image
1) I like looking at a local area's rental market as an additional bellwether of where things are heading.

If vacancies are rising, and rents are getting cut, it's a suggestion that the broader housing market is oversupplied.

And that general housing deflation could be on the way (as if the case in Las Vegas).
2) Data from Apartment List shows that apartment rents in Vegas are down about 10% from their post-pandemic peak in 2022.

Back then, they were at $1,586 per apartment.

Now they're at $1,417.

(note that this is still 21% above pre-pandemic rents) Image
Read 10 tweets
Feb 27
Who would buy a house in this environment?

Corporate CEOs openly stating that white-collar jobs won't be necessary, and others acting on it with 40% layoffs.

I'm talking to people everyday who have good jobs, but are skeptical that their job will exist in 5 years.

And for good reason. Jack Dorsey is saying the quiet part out loud and going on record stating that he thinks "a majority of companies" will follow suit in the next year.

That's wild.

Block's stock jumped over 20% in response, indicating that Wall Street traders loved it.

If this becomes a "provable" model for success, other companies will follow suit.

Who would want buy a house right now?Image
1) For those that don't know - Block, formerly Square, is a payment processing company founded by Jack Dorsey, who also co-founded Twitter.

They do over $24 billion in revenue per year.

With over $3 billion in EBITDA. They're profitable, and their profit grew 20% YoY prior to these job cuts.

Yet they just cut 40% of their workforce (4,000) people due to "AI" and their CEO is going on record saying he thinks a lot of other companies will follow suit.
2) This quote, in particular, was striking:

“Within the next year, I believe the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion and make similar structural changes”

Some say that Dorsey and other tech CEOs are using AI as cover for job cuts they would "otherwise do".

but this feels different.
Read 15 tweets
Feb 20
You can't make it up.

Builder had house listed for $469k in summer.

Then listed for rent at $2.9k. then cut rent to $2.4k.

Then sold it to rent-to-own company, who is now selling a 50% ownership share for $245,000.

Based on a "retail price of $490,000".

When you see stuff like this, you know something bad is about to happen in the housing market.Image
1) Interestingly, I toured this site last weekend when I was filming for my YouTube Channel.

There are dozens of homes recently completed, sitting empty.

Some with sold signs, others listed as available. Image
2) And the builder, Starlight Homes, is now aggressively cutting prices on new houses that are sitting empty.

Here's a 4x3, 2,400 SF that builder just did a $25k price cut on.

Now down to $439k, or $182 PSF. Image
Read 6 tweets
Jan 31
What's going on in Colorado?

The state, normally a migration powerhouse, has fallen off a cliff the last four years.

And in 2025, over 12,000 Americans left Colorado.

The biggest outmigration in the state's history according to US Census Bureau Population Estimates.

Normally, over the last 35 years, Colorado adds about 30,000 people per year. So a -12,000 reading on domestic migration is shocking.

Higher housing costs, return to office mandates, and increases in crime are causing the exodus.Image
1) Colorado now relies almost exclusively on international migration to drive the bus on remaining population growth.

Although international migration dropped heavily in 2025 as well, and could go even lower in 2026 based on current immigration policies. Image
2) The reasons for this are due to high housing costs and increasing crime.

Home values in Colorado are now $529k across the state, which is the 7th highest in the U.S.

And the typical mortgage payment to buy a house is over $3,500/month.

This was a state that used to be affordable back from 2000 to 2020, but post-pandemic has become extremely unaffordable for the local population.Image
Read 8 tweets
Jan 27
Austin TX - almost undervalued.

Prices have dropped so much that Austin's housing market is now only 3% overvalued in early 2026.

This is how housing crashes can be a good thing. Prices are down nearly 25% from peak and wages have kept rising, and buyers in Austin now have significantly more affordability.

Reventure will be giving a "buy signal" on Austin once it crosses into undervalued territory.

That won't mean prices will immediately stop dropping.

But it will mean the worst is over.

And that buyers/investors can get in at a decent price point in a market that is still top of the table in organic demographic growth.Image
1) Here's the math on the graph from above:

Values in Austin are down roughly 15% from Dec 2021 to Dec 2025 (and they're down by 24% from May 2022 to today).

In the same span, incomes have risen by 17%.

That combination, combined with a rising base effect, has dropped Austin's overvaluation rate from 39% to 3% in the last four years.
2) The reason prices are dropping in Austin is due a combination of a) very high overvaluation during pandemic, b) excessive building and supply, c) a mini local economic recession, which has led to layoffs in the tech industry, and d) reduced inbound migration.

All of these factors have combined to result in aggressive price cuts (and rent cuts) across the market.
Read 10 tweets
Jan 21
Dec 2025 was the worst December on record for homebuyer demand.

NAR's pending sale index fell to 71.8.

Down 30% from pre-pandemic norms on contract signings. (and still dropping from last year's already historically low levels).

Indicating 2026 is going to get off to a rough start on closings and buyer interest.

The only way out is lower prices.Image
1) I'd like to remind everyone that we've now had 7 rate cuts since August 2024.

Back then the Fed Funds was at 5.25-5.50%.

Now it's at 3.50-3.75%.

And buyer demand is still dropping.
2) Moreover - Mortgage Rates are down about 100 basis points from where they were last year (6.1% v 7.1%).

So, affordability has improved incrementally.
Read 21 tweets

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