Curious about the performance of short-term rentals in Davenport, United States? Over the last year, the average occupancy rate was 61% with an ADR (Average Daily Rate) of 205€. Hosts earned on average 3434€ per month.

90-day occupancy forecast for Davenport so you can update rates and stay ahead of competitors.
Key metrics to optimize your pricing strategy
Avg. Monthly Revenue
3434€
$3125 USD
YoY Revenue Change
-4%
vs. previous year
Occupancy Rate
61%
~18 days/month
Average Daily Rate
205€
$187 USD
Seasonality Index
60%
demand variation
Best Months
March, July
peak season
Worst Months
September, October
low season
Our AI-powered platform automatically optimizes your rates. Maximize your revenue with intelligent dynamic pricing.
Over the analysis window, Davenport ran 61% average occupancy across roughly 221 booked nights a year, five points above the 56% US national average and comfortably mid-pack among the 42 US cities tracked. A seasonality index of 60% places it as a moderately seasonal market, less spiky than coastal or resort destinations, with demand concentrated in the spring rather than spread perfectly evenly. That steady, business-supported occupancy is the market's real strength.
The revenue figures should be read with care: the packet's 204 euro ADR and 3,444 euro average monthly revenue sit high for an Iowa city this size and warrant cross-checking against a local comparison set, but on the recorded numbers the takeaway is a market whose returns come from solid, reliable occupancy at firm rates. Revenue slipped 4% year on year, a modest decline in line with the broader softening across US secondary markets, pointing to a stable rather than surging destination.
Average occupancy rate by month in Davenport, compared with the same month a year earlier.
| Month | Occupancy | Prior year |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 2025 | 64.6% | 65.2% |
| Aug 2025 | 55.8% | 55.5% |
| Sep 2025 | 52.3% | 53.2% |
| Oct 2025 | 61.2% | 61.1% |
| Nov 2025 | 62% | 61.3% |
| Dec 2025 | 63.3% | 64.8% |
| Jan 2026 | 63.2% | 61% |
| Feb 2026 | 77.1% | 76% |
| Mar 2026 | 72% | 73.2% |
| Apr 2026 | 66% | 64.3% |
| May 2026 | 58.7% | 56.2% |
| Jun 2026 | 61.9% | 66.8% |
📌 Historical trends reveal seasonal highs – plan accordingly.
These figures reflect real-time demand in Davenport, helping you plan and price strategically.
Davenport, Iowa, is the largest of the Quad Cities straddling the Mississippi River, and its short-term rental demand is driven by a practical mix of regional events, riverfront tourism and steady business travel rather than headline leisure pull. The riverfront district, the Figge Art Museum, the German American Heritage Center and the Mississippi River setting anchor leisure stays, while the Quad Cities' manufacturing and logistics base (John Deere is headquartered nearby in the Quad Cities region), the RiverCenter convention venue and minor-league baseball at Modern Woodmen Park feed a reliable stream of corporate and group visitors.
This is a mid-American market where demand is event- and business-led and weighted toward the spring. With a sizeable pool of active listings for a city of roughly 100,000, Davenport is a competitive, supply-deep market by US secondary-city standards. Demand here rewards operators who track the regional event calendar and corporate-travel rhythms rather than those expecting a single tourist high season.
Davenport's demand peaks distinctly in late winter and early spring. The strongest months in the data are March and the February-March window, with occupancy climbing to roughly 76-77% in February of both 2025 and 2026 and the low-to-mid seventies in March, a pronounced spring spike tied to events, business travel and tax-season corporate demand. The weakest months are September and October, when occupancy softens into the low-to-mid fifties as summer travel fades and before the year-end holidays.
Summer is solid but not the peak: July and June run in the low-to-mid sixties, supported by riverfront activity and baseball season, while the post-summer dip into September is the clear soft patch. December holds up reasonably on holiday travel. The practical takeaway is to price most aggressively across February and March, treat summer as a steady mid-tier, and use the September-October lull for value pricing or longer corporate stays rather than chasing thin leisure demand.
Downtown Davenport and the riverfront district along the Mississippi is the prime short-term rental zone: walkable to the RiverCenter, the Figge Art Museum, restaurants and the ballpark, it converts best for both event-goers and business travellers. The historic Village of East Davenport, with its 19th-century streetscape, boutiques and proximity to Lindsay Park, offers character-led stays that appeal to leisure guests and weekend visitors.
The Hilltop and central neighbourhoods around Brady Street provide more affordable, residential stock with good road access, suiting longer corporate stays and value travellers. Areas near Interstate 80 and the Quad Cities International Airport (across the river in Moline) favour guests prioritising connectivity and quick regional access. Across all of them, the operational priority is confirming the property complies with Davenport's rental-permit and inspection requirements before listing.
Iowa is one of the more permissive US states for short-term rentals at the state level: state law limits how far cities can go in outright banning rentals, but it expressly allows municipalities to require permits, inspections, safety standards and to apply zoning and lodging taxes. So the binding rules in Davenport are local. In practice, operating a short-term rental in Davenport requires complying with the city's rental-property licensing and inspection regime and applicable zoning, plus collecting and remitting state and local hotel/motel lodging tax.
Public detail on the exact Davenport permit type, fees and any STR-specific conditions is inconsistent online, so this should be treated as a general framework rather than a precise licence description. Anyone buying or onboarding a unit should verify the current requirements directly with the City of Davenport's licensing and zoning departments, confirm whether a dedicated short-term-rental permit or a general rental licence applies, and register for the appropriate lodging-tax accounts before listing.
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* Calculations based on 30 days/month. Actual results may vary depending on market, season, property type, and implemented strategy.
Davenport averaged about 61% occupancy over the analysis period, roughly 221 booked nights a year. That is five points above the 56% US national average and mid-pack among the 42 US cities ListingOK tracks, reflecting steady, business- and event-supported demand rather than a single tourist peak.
February and March are the strongest months, with occupancy reaching roughly 76-77% in February, a clear spring spike driven by events and business travel. Summer runs a steady low-to-mid sixties, while September and October are the softest, dropping into the low-to-mid fifties. Price aggressively in late winter and early spring.
Iowa lets cities require permits, inspections and lodging taxes even though it limits outright bans, so Davenport's rules are local. You will generally need to meet the city's rental-licensing and inspection requirements and collect hotel/motel tax. Because published STR permit detail is inconsistent, confirm the exact requirements with the City of Davenport before listing.
Downtown and the Mississippi riverfront convert best, walkable to the RiverCenter, the Figge Art Museum and the ballpark for event and business guests. The historic Village of East Davenport offers character-led leisure stays; Hilltop and Brady Street areas are more affordable for longer corporate stays. Confirm rental-permit compliance before listing in any area.