Santa Rosa Beach, Florida short-term rentals run an average of 56% occupancy and $393 RevPAR across the year.
Santa Rosa Beach short-term rentals run 56% average occupancy across the year, producing an annual RevPAR of $393 — occupancy multiplied by average daily rate.
From May 2025 to May 2026, Santa Rosa Beach's occupancy is down 2.3% and RevPAR is up 3.5%.
On AirDNA's seasonality scale, Santa Rosa Beach scores 44 out of 100, where a higher score means steadier demand year-round and a lower score means sharper peak-and-trough swings.
Santa Rosa Beach's Seasonality subscore is 44 out of 100, one of five inputs to its overall Market Score of 65. A higher score means steadier demand across the year.
Seasonality is the percentage gap between Santa Rosa Beach's lowest and highest monthly average revenue over the past year — the smaller the swing, the higher the score.
It is benchmarked against other short-term rental markets in the same country with at least 15 active listings.
Market-level averages hide wide variation. Here's how to go deeper in the app:
Key definitions

How occupancy and RevPAR rise and fall through the year in Santa Rosa Beach, month by month.
This is the tip of the iceberg
Explore more Santa Rosa Beach data
Frequently asked
Santa Rosa Beach runs 56% annual occupancy.
Santa Rosa Beach's short-term rental occupancy is down 2.3% from May 2025 to May 2026, currently 56% of available nights booked.
RevPAR (revenue per available rental) is occupancy multiplied by average daily rate. It reflects what a listing earns across every available night. Santa Rosa Beach's annual RevPAR is $393.
Santa Rosa Beach's RevPAR is up 3.5% from May 2025 to May 2026, currently $393.
Santa Rosa Beach scores 44 out of 100 on AirDNA's seasonality scale. Higher scores mean steadier demand year-round.
Get more in the app