Curious about the performance of short-term rentals in Springville, United States? Over the last year, the average occupancy rate was 48% with an ADR (Average Daily Rate) of 255€. Hosts earned on average 3444€ per month.

90-day occupancy forecast for Springville so you can update rates and stay ahead of competitors.
Key metrics to optimize your pricing strategy
Avg. Monthly Revenue
3444€
$3134 USD
YoY Revenue Change
-3%
vs. previous year
Occupancy Rate
48%
~14 days/month
Average Daily Rate
255€
$232 USD
Seasonality Index
99%
demand variation
Best Months
July, June
peak season
Worst Months
February, January
low season
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Springville's 48% occupancy and 173 occupied nights a year are healthy figures for a rural cabin market, where the structural ceiling sits lower than in cities: demand is weekend-weighted, and midweek fill depends on a thinner pool of remote workers and retirees. The €255 ADR is the standout number — strong relative to the area's property prices — and it reflects what guests pay for here: privacy, land, river access and hot tubs rather than proximity to anything urban. Together the figures produce about €3,444 in average monthly revenue.
The -3% year-over-year change reads as stability, not decline — within normal annual noise for a market this size. When evaluating a specific property, weight the weekend math: a cabin here sells mostly Friday and Saturday nights at premium rates, and the difference between a good and a mediocre year is how many of those it converts, plus the holiday weeks. Occupancy meaningfully above 48% usually signals either underpricing or a genuinely differentiated property; occupancy well below it with decent photos usually signals a pricing calendar that ignores the Valley's heat-escape season in June and July, when demand is strongest and rates should lead the year.
Average occupancy rate by month in Springville, compared with the same month a year earlier.
| Month | Occupancy | Prior year |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 2025 | 60% | 63.2% |
| Aug 2025 | 59.3% | 57.9% |
| Sep 2025 | 49.5% | 52.5% |
| Oct 2025 | 50.3% | 50.7% |
| Nov 2025 | 43.4% | 46.3% |
| Dec 2025 | 39.4% | 42.5% |
| Jan 2026 | 36% | 39.2% |
| Feb 2026 | 39.7% | 39.9% |
| Mar 2026 | 44.5% | 40% |
| Apr 2026 | 51.8% | 49.6% |
| May 2026 | 63.6% | 57.4% |
| Jun 2026 | 64.8% | 61.9% |
📌 Historical trends reveal seasonal highs – plan accordingly.
These figures reflect real-time demand in Springville, helping you plan and price strategically.
Springville is a small foothill community on California Highway 190, the road that climbs from Porterville into Sequoia National Forest and the Giant Sequoia National Monument. Rentals here sell access and escape in equal measure: giant-sequoia groves and mountain trailheads up the hill, the Tule River running through the canyon, Lake Success ten minutes down the road, and a quiet ranch-country setting that Central Valley families use to get out of the summer heat. The Springville Sierra Rodeo, a fixture since the 1950s, delivers a reliable spring demand spike. Guests are almost entirely drive-to Californians — Los Angeles, Bakersfield, Fresno and the Valley towns — booking cabins, ranch houses and river-adjacent cottages for weekends.
Over July 2025 to June 2026, listings averaged 48% occupancy at a €255 average daily rate (ADR), generating about €3,444 in monthly revenue on roughly 173 occupied nights a year, with revenue down a modest 3% year over year. The numbers describe a steady rural getaway market: no boom, no bust, and — with a seasonality index of 99, essentially the average across the markets we track — no brutal off-season either.
A seasonality index of 99 makes Springville a rarity among outdoor-destination markets: one that is no more seasonal than the average market we track. July and June are the best months — river season, high-country access, Valley families escaping the heat below — and January and February are the weakest, when the higher elevations see snow and the canyon turns quiet. But the swing between those poles is moderate.
The reasons are structural. Springville itself sits low enough, at roughly 300 metres, that winter rarely closes it off, so cabins here stay reachable when the true mountain communities further up Highway 190 get snowed in. Spring brings the rodeo crowd and wildflower season along the Tule River; autumn offers the sequoia groves without the summer crowds. The result is a market where every season has a sellable story, and the calendar rewards steady weekend pricing over dramatic peak-chasing. The practical implication: do not build a summer-or-nothing plan here. Price weekends firmly year-round, use midweek discounts to convert remote workers and retirees, and treat June and July as the opportunity for premium rates rather than the only months that matter.
Springville is not a town of neighbourhoods so much as a scatter of settings, and the setting is the product. The small centre along Highway 190 — market, feed store, a handful of restaurants — anchors listings that sell convenience and rodeo-weekend proximity. The most sought-after inventory sits along the Tule River and its forks, where cabins with river access or river sound command the strongest weekend demand in the warm months. Above town, properties climb into oak and pine country with long Sierra views; below it, ranch-style homes on acreage toward Lake Success attract groups wanting space, horses next door and dark skies.
Further up Highway 190, the higher mountain communities — Camp Nelson, Ponderosa, Cedar Slope — are distinct micro-markets at elevation, snowbound at times in winter; buyers often weigh Springville against them and choose Springville precisely for its year-round access. For a host, the differentiators that move bookings are tangible: a hot tub under the stars, river frontage, fenced land for dogs, and honest drive-time guidance to the Trail of 100 Giants and the sequoia groves, which is what most guests actually came for.
Springville is unincorporated, so short-term-rental rules come from Tulare County — currently one of California's lighter-touch jurisdictions. The Board of Supervisors considered a dedicated short-term-rental ordinance and rejected it in 2024, so as of this writing there is no county permit, cap or rental-specific licensing scheme in force. What does apply is the county's transient occupancy tax: operators renting for stays of 30 days or less must register with the Tulare County Treasurer-Tax Collector, collect the tax — currently 10% — from guests and remit it on schedule, with penalties for late filing.
Standard property rules still bite in the foothills: building and septic permits, defensible-space and fire-safety requirements in a high fire-hazard area, and any private-road or well-share agreements on rural parcels. Insurance for wildfire exposure deserves early attention — it can be the largest operating surprise in this part of the Sierra.
The regulatory calm should not be assumed permanent: California counties revisit short-term-rental rules frequently, and a rejected ordinance can return in amended form. Rules change; verify current requirements with Tulare County before listing, starting with the Treasurer-Tax Collector's transient occupancy tax registration.
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* Calculations based on 30 days/month. Actual results may vary depending on market, season, property type, and implemented strategy.
Over July 2025 to June 2026 listings averaged 48% occupancy, a €255 average daily rate and about €3,444 in monthly revenue on roughly 173 occupied nights a year, with revenue down just 3% year over year. Those are steady numbers for a rural cabin market, and property prices in the foothills keep the yield math workable.
Yes — Springville in Tulare County, California, on Highway 190, the gateway to Sequoia National Forest and the Giant Sequoia National Monument (not the Springville in Utah). The Trail of 100 Giants and the high-country groves are a scenic drive up the hill, which is the trip most guests come for.
July and June lead — river season and Central Valley families escaping the heat — while January and February are slowest. With a seasonality index of 99, right at the average across markets we track, the swings are moderate and every season has bookable weekends.
Tulare County currently has no short-term-rental-specific permit or cap — a draft county ordinance was rejected in 2024 — but you must register for the county's transient occupancy tax (currently 10%) and remit it for stays of 30 days or less. Rules change; verify with Tulare County before listing.
€255 is the market average and strong for a rural area — guests pay for privacy, river access, acreage and hot tubs rather than location in the urban sense. Differentiated cabins with river frontage or standout outdoor amenities price above it, especially on summer weekends.