Short-Term vs Long-Term Rentals
| Factor | Short-Term (Airbnb) | Long-Term |
|---|---|---|
| Gross yield | 7–12% (coastal) | 4–6% |
| Management | Active / complex | Passive |
| Seasonality | Very seasonal | Year-round |
| Vacancy risk | High in winter | Low |
| Best areas | Budva, Tivat, Kotor | Podgorica, Budva year-round |
Short-Term Rental Market
Montenegro's tourism sector is booming: 2.7M tourists in 2024, up 12% year-on-year. The Adriatic coastal season runs May–October, with peak demand July–August.
Average nightly rates (peak season):
- Budva (1-bed): €60–100/night
- Tivat/Porto Montenegro (1-bed): €80–140/night
- Kotor area (1-bed): €70–120/night
- Herceg Novi (1-bed): €50–80/night
Platforms: Airbnb, Booking.com, and local Croatian/Montenegrin platforms.
Management Options
1. Self-manage: Highest yield, requires presence or reliable local contact
2. Local property management company: 15–25% of revenue, handles everything
3. Developer-managed programmes (Porto Montenegro, Lustica Bay): 30–40% split but guaranteed income sometimes offered
Tax on Rental Income
Short-term rental income is taxed at a flat 9% in Montenegro. You must:
- Register as a landlord with the local tax authority
- Issue receipts / maintain records
- File an annual tax return
The low 9% rate makes Montenegro one of Europe's most attractive countries for rental income tax.
Practical Considerations
- Tourist registration: All short-term rental guests must be registered with the police (your management company handles this)
- Tourism tax: Collect €0.50–€2/person/night tourist tax from guests
- Utility costs: Factor in electricity (air conditioning in summer is significant), water, internet
- Off-season use: Many investors use their properties in shoulder seasons and rent only in peak