The Rise of the Flexible Stay: Mid-Term Rentals US vs Europe
Mid-term rentals are reshaping housing. A US vs Europe comparison driven by business travel, remote work, and regulation.

The mid-term rental (MTR) market — stays typically ranging from 30 days to several months — is revolutionizing furnished housing on both sides of the Atlantic, driven by global mobility and the rise of remote work.
In the US, the MTR revolution has been driven primarily by fast-growing niche platforms targeting specific high-demand professional segments: traveling professionals, particularly itinerant healthcare workers, relocated corporate employees, and consultants seeking reliable, furnished, verified housing. The model relies largely on independent owners who find in MTRs an ideal balance, avoiding the regulatory and operational constraints of short-term rentals while generating more than a traditional long-term lease.
In Europe, the MTR phenomenon is less about creating a new category and more about adapting an existing one in response to dense urbanization and increasingly aggressive STR regulation. Demand is strongly influenced by digital nomads, international students, relocated corporate employees, and a strong culture of temporary or seasonal work. For many European cities, strict night caps and heavy registration procedures for traditional STRs have acted as a major catalyst. Renting 30 days or more often allows properties to exempt from tourist tax, licenses, and annual night caps. Both markets converge toward the same profitable model: predictability over volume.
Acceda per leggere l'articolo completo
Crei un account gratuito o acceda per avere accesso completo ai report, ai dati di mercato e alle analisi del settore di Scale Wire.
Gianpaolo Vairo
Segue il settore degli affitti brevi per Scale Wire. Focus su Market Data, trend tecnologici e analisi di mercato.



