Two contract models dominate Cyprus short-term rental management. Guaranteed income (master lease) pays the owner a fixed monthly rent and shifts vacancy and pricing risk to the manager. Performance-based agreements split gross or net income with the owner and align both parties on upside. The right model depends on the owner’s risk tolerance, cash-flow needs, and confidence in the manager’s operational capability.
The choice is binary on signature day and consequential through every month that follows. It is worth a careful read before signing.
What Guaranteed Income (Master Lease) Actually Means
Under a master lease, the manager rents the property from the owner on a fixed monthly basis and operates it on the manager’s own account. The manager controls the listings, the pricing, the bookings, and the day-to-day operations. The owner receives a stable monthly payment regardless of what the property earns through the platforms.
How the rent is calculated
The monthly rent under a master lease typically reflects a haircut against the manager’s modelled revenue for the property. The manager projects gross revenue based on location, layout, condition, and seasonal demand, then subtracts an operating reserve and a margin. What is left is the rent the owner receives. A property that the manager believes can produce EUR 30,000 in annual gross revenue might yield a master-lease rent of around EUR 18,000 to 22,000, depending on the manager’s confidence and operating costs. The exact split is a negotiation, not a formula.
What the manager controls in this model
Under master lease, the manager controls all operational and commercial decisions: listings, pricing, channel selection, bookings, guest management, cleaning, maintenance scheduling, and inventory. The owner steps back. The owner’s role is to receive the rent, hold title, and approve major expenditure above an agreed threshold. The owner does not pick rates. The owner does not approve guests. The trade-off for the predictable income is operational distance.
Where guaranteed income works best
Master lease suits owners with predictable cash-flow needs (mortgage coverage, retirement income, second-home running costs), owners who want full operational distance, and owners who would rather take a smaller predictable number than chase a larger variable one. It also suits owners with limited confidence in their ability to evaluate operational performance month by month, because the model removes that judgment from the relationship.
It works less well for owners who want exposure to a strong year, owners who enjoy operational involvement, and owners with high confidence in a manager’s pricing capability who would prefer to keep the upside.
The structural choice between models sits inside Cyprus partnership model selection and is worth modelling against the owner’s specific cash-flow and risk profile.
What Performance-Based Agreements Actually Mean
Under a performance-based agreement, the manager runs the property on the owner’s behalf and takes a percentage of revenue as a fee. The owner keeps the upside above the fee, accepts the downside below it, and retains commercial decision rights to a degree the contract specifies.
Common revenue-share structures
Three structures cover most performance-based agreements:
- Percentage of gross: the manager takes a fixed percentage (typically 15% to 25%) of gross rental income. Simple, transparent, and the dominant Cyprus model.
- Percentage of net: the manager takes a percentage of revenue after deducting agreed operating costs. Cleaner for the owner if the cost basis is well-defined; messier if it is not.
- Tiered or hurdle structures: a base fee up to a revenue threshold, with a higher percentage above it. Aligns the manager harder on outperformance, but adds complexity to the calculation.
The right structure is the one whose mechanics both parties can read on a single page. Complexity in the fee structure tends to produce friction over time.
What the manager controls in this model
The manager controls daily operations: listings, pricing, guest communication, cleaning, maintenance coordination, reporting. The owner retains commercial visibility (what is happening, why, with what result), approval rights on costs above a threshold, and exit rights under the contract. The relationship is closer than a master lease and more involved for the owner. The substance of what the operations partner controls under each model varies by contract; a good agreement names the boundaries explicitly.
Where performance-based works best
Performance-based suits owners who want exposure to upside, accept seasonal variation, value visibility into operations, and have confidence in the manager’s pricing and operational capability. It works particularly well for owners running multiple properties, where the variance averages out across the portfolio, and for properties in strong locations where peak-season performance is the real prize.
It works less well for owners with rigid monthly cash-flow needs, owners with low risk tolerance, and owners who do not want to be in monthly conversation with a manager about performance.
Side-by-Side Comparison: Risk, Upside, Control, and Reporting
Six axes summarise the difference between the two models.
| Axis | Guaranteed income (master lease) | Performance-based |
|---|---|---|
| Predictability | High; same monthly payment | Variable; tied to occupancy and rates |
| Upside capture | Low; manager keeps it | High; owner keeps it net of fee |
| Vacancy risk | On manager | On owner |
| Decision-making control | On manager | Shared, owner retains approvals |
| Reporting visibility | Light; payment is the report | Heavy; full operational metrics |
| Fee transparency | High; rent is the rent | High when structure is simple, lower when complex |
Both models can be well-executed; both can be badly executed. The model is the framework, not the outcome. The manager running the model is what determines whether the framework produces the result it should.
Owner Profile: Which Model Fits Which Owner
Factors that point to guaranteed income
- The owner needs the monthly number for a specific external commitment (mortgage, second home, retirement).
- The owner does not have the bandwidth or interest to engage with monthly performance reporting.
- The property has uncertain revenue ceiling and the owner prefers a known floor.
- The owner does not have strong operational opinions about the property.
- Cash-flow predictability is more valuable to the owner than absolute return.
Factors that point to performance-based
- The owner can absorb monthly variation and is more interested in annual return.
- The owner has confidence in the manager’s pricing and operational capability.
- The property is in a strong location where peak performance has meaningful upside.
- The owner wants visibility into operations and a relationship rather than a transaction.
- The owner is running multiple properties and wants portfolio-level exposure to upside.
The decision is also affected by the prior question of whether the property is right for short-term rental at all. We covered the short-term versus long-term rental decision in detail in a sister post, and the answer there shapes which model is even on the table. For owners still building their general view on Cyprus management, why professional management pays off in Cyprus is the broader case.
How to Evaluate a Manager’s Offer in Either Model
Whichever model the owner picks, the manager’s offer should pass five tests:
- The offer reflects a credible revenue model for the specific property, not a generic number.
- The fee structure is readable on one page without external calculation.
- The contract names what is included, what is charged on top, and at what threshold the owner approves costs.
- The reporting cadence and format are specified, not left to discretion.
- The exit terms (notice period, tenancy or guest data ownership, transition obligations) are clear.
A manager who declines to put any of these in writing is offering an arrangement, not a contract.
Frequently Asked Questions
Neither model is universally better. Guaranteed income is better for owners who need predictable monthly cash flow and are willing to give up upside for stability. Performance-based is better for owners who want exposure to peak-season returns and are comfortable with monthly variation. Cyprus’s seasonal demand curve is steep, which tends to favour performance-based for properties in strong tourism locations and master lease for properties whose performance is harder to predict. The right answer depends on the owner’s profile, not on the model’s reputation.
Most managers will accommodate a model switch at contract renewal or, with notice, mid-term. The economics will be re-modelled because performance-based and master lease price different risks; what was a EUR 1,500 monthly master-lease rent does not translate directly into a 20% performance fee on the same property. Owners considering a switch should ask the manager to model both side by side using the property’s actual historical performance, then decide on the basis of the comparison rather than on an assumption.
Under master lease, the rent is the rent. The owner receives the agreed monthly amount in February as in August, regardless of how many bookings the manager has. That is the essence of the model and the reason owners with rigid cash-flow needs choose it. The manager absorbs the seasonal variance internally, which is also why the master-lease rent reflects a haircut against modelled gross. Predictability has a price; the owner pays it through the spread between rent received and revenue earned.
Performance-based fees are typically calculated as a percentage of gross rental income, applied to the revenue collected from booking platforms before operating costs. The percentage is usually in the 15% to 25% band on Cyprus short-term rentals, with full-service contracts at the top and lighter-touch contracts at the bottom. Some managers use percentage of net or tiered structures; the calculation should be specified in the contract and applied consistently month over month. Reporting should show gross, fee, expenses, and net payout on every statement.
If you are weighing the two models on a Cyprus property, our team can discuss which model fits your property and model both side by side against the property’s specifics before recommending one.