A proposal should help you make a confident decision, not confuse you.
When details are missing, owners usually pay for that later through delays, disputes, or poor performance.
Core Elements You Should Expect
- Clear management fee and any additional charges
- Projected performance assumptions with rationale
- Guest communication and support model (including nights/weekends)
- Cleaning, inspection, and quality-control workflow
- Maintenance approval thresholds and emergency process
- Owner reporting frequency and payout timeline
- Contract duration, notice period, and termination terms
Red Flags to Watch
Be careful if a proposal is too generic or avoids specifics.
- Unexplained fees
- No defined SLA for owner support
- No examples of monthly reporting
- Aggressive guarantees without methodology
Final Tip
The right proposal should feel transparent, practical, and owner-focused.
If you can explain it clearly to a family member in two minutes, that is usually a good sign.