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

Jun 10
Florida's population losses are compounding.

Miami had the 4th-largest population loss among U.S. metros in Q1 2026.

Orlando had the 6th biggest.

And Tampa lost more people than Chicago.

This data comes from Bank of America's internal account data and is a shocking revelation for anyone who thinks Florida's housing market is recovering.

People continue to leave Florida due to still high prices, soaring property taxes, and expensive insurance.

So much so that a state that was built on massive levels of in-migration of Americans is now losing people in its three biggest metro areas.

As a result, don't be surprised if Florida's housing market continues to correct until things become cheap enough to keep people from leaving.

Track migration by county at reventure.app/mobile.Image
1) Some corners of the real estate industry are talking about a potential "recovery" in Florida's housing market in 2026.

However, that doesn't seem likely if the state's three biggest metro areas are all losing people net on migration.
2) This migration fall off is a continuation of a trend that started 4 years ago.

Back in 2022, Florida's domestic migration (Americans moving in net) peaked at 311k.

By 2025, it had fallen 93% to 22k.

One of the lowest migration figures since the last housing downturn in 2007-2011.Image
Read 8 tweets
Jun 9
The spring 2026 housing market is off to a rough start.

In May, 4.17 million existing sales took place according to NAR.

That's about 20% below the 30-year average, and near the record-low levels of the last four years.

In fact, sales this May were roughly in line with the volume we saw in 2008, 2009, and 2011, during the worst housing market downturn in history.

Some in real estate are getting excited about a supposed recovery in sales (+3% YoY). However, when you look at the long-term graph, you can see a real recovery is a long way off.

Prices need to drop meaningfully before buyers will come back in meaningfully.

To sales by ZIP code in your area at reventure.app/mobile.Image
1) I think it's important to pay attention to the long-term trends with these sales reports, because certain corners of the real estate industry are trying to turn a 3% MoM or YoY gain into a sign of meaningful recovery in the market.

However, there is no recovery when one considers the long-term data.
2) This is the same existing sales graph, but with every month included, going back to 1996.

You can see just how poor the last 4 years have been in terms of demand, and that there is no breakout occurring, despite some of the headlines.

(for comparison, May 2026 sales volumes were 37% below the cycle peak, and 23% below the long-term average)Image
Read 13 tweets
Jun 8
One of America's biggest housing crashes is now bottoming out.

Austin, TX has dropped so much that the market is undervalued.

The market has corrected already by 26%, and incomes keep rising, meaning the fundamentals now support today's price levels.

At the peak of the bubble, Reventure's valuation metric had Austin at 49% overvalued (April 2022).

Now it's 0.4% undervalued.

You can actually still get some good deals in Austin right now, and I wouldn't be surprised if values keep dropping for another 6-12 months as the inventory overhang burns off.

Download the app to see Overvaluation % by ZIP: reventure.app/mobileImage
1) The situation in Austin is a clear case of a classic "boom-bust" real estate cycle.

Values and inbound migration spiked during the pandemic; builders and apartment developers permitted a huge pipeline of units in response, and today a lower demand level is intersecting with that excess supply.

Causing values to drop.
2) Austin's economy has remained extremely healthy through this housing correction.

The metro unemployment rate is at 3.4% as of April 2026, still near historic lows.

Meaning their home values and rents crashing did not cause a noticeable decline in spending or employment.
Read 9 tweets
May 20
Lots of people are speculating about what the higher yields and upward inflation pressure means for real estate.

The answer will come down to wage growth.

In a true "inflationary" scenario, wage growth will take off alongside inflation, and there will be asset-level appreciation across real estate as a result.

However, in a transitory inflation scenario, wage growth does not take off with inflation, and the higher yields and inflation spike eventually dissipate.

And could even lead to deflation after the fact.

Right now, wage growth is not showing any real signs of moving upward, which makes this look different than the 2021/22 inflation spike, as well as the one that occurred in the 1970s.

My gut instinct is that the higher yields and inflation spike will hit a ceiling with wage growth and will come back down.

Simply put, there isn't much "room" for consumers to absorb the higher costs.Image
1) And this is very important to understand for the housing market, because in real estate, there are only two types of inflation that actually matter:

-wage inflation
-rent inflation

These two types of inflation feed directly into home prices.
2) Wage inflation directly increases a homebuyer's capacity to afford higher prices and mortgage payments, while rent inflation increases an investor's capacity to afford high prices and mortgage payments.

Moreover, higher rents are a big incentive for renters to jump into the market and buy.
Read 15 tweets
May 10
Seattle's housing market is going through a historic inventory shock.

There are now 8,630 listings across the Seattle metro as of Apr 2026.

In a normal April, there are only 4,600 listings.

Meaning inventory today is 88% above normal.

This is happening due to layoffs, a historic lack of affordability, and increased outbound migration.

Ultimately, good news for local Seattle buyers. For the first time in a decade, you have control over this market.

Expect prices to fall in the next year, potentially by a lot in certain ZIP codes.

Access the data on mobile: reventure.app/mobileImage
1) While Seattle's days on market and months of supply are still tighter than most other markets, what matters most here is how Seattle's market is trending compared to its own history.

And as a result of this inventory spike, values are already dropping.

Down -1.7% YoY.
2) The biggest decline is in King County, where values have dropped -2.5% in the last year. Image
Read 7 tweets
May 4
Some crazy stuff is going on in Nashville's housing market.

Opendoor, America's largest homebuyer, just purchased this house for $462K in March.

But then immediately relisted and cut the price to $430k.

a $32,000 loss on price in a matter of weeks.

On top of that, the appraised value for this house is $548,000.

Meaning today's list price is 22% below 2025 appraisal.

Suggesting major downward pressure on values in Nashville.

(that, or both Opendoor and the Nashville tax appraiser don't know what they're doing).Image
1) Opendoor's models can sometimes produce strange results, however I've never seen them take a $32,000 loss in a month.

Even down in Florida last year, when things were very crazy in terms of declining prices, I never witnessed anything like this.
2) On top of this, the Nashville tax appraiser seems like they might have dramatically overestimated the true value on some properties with the 2025 assessment.

A $548,000 appraised value for a house listed at $430,000 a year later is disastrous.

(/ a signal of declining values overall)Image
Read 7 tweets

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