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Vacation Market

Data as of June 2026 — refreshed periodically

Broken Bow, OK: Vacation Rental Investment Guide (June 2026)

Luxury log-cabin forest escape. McCurtain County, SE Oklahoma — the Hochatown/Beavers Bend State Park cabin corridor on Broken Bow Lake, ~3h from Dallas-Fort Worth.

The Numbers

Median Price

$305,000

ADR

$300

avg daily rate

Occupancy

40%

Proj. Gross Revenue

$43,800

per year · 14.4% gross yield

5-Yr Appreciation

+35%

Property Tax

0.75%

effective / yr

The STR Math

The median Broken Bow deal, run through DSCR math

Purchase price (median)
$305,000
Down payment (20%)
$61,000
Loan amount
$244,000
P&I @ 7.91% / 30yr
$1,775/mo
Property taxes (0.75%/yr)
$191/mo
Insurance (~0.6%/yr)
$153/mo
PITIA (full payment)
$2,118/mo
Est. STR gross ($300 ADR × 40% occ.)
$3,650/mo

Illustrative DSCR

1.72

Above the 1.25 threshold most STR lenders want for their best pricing tiers.

Run your own numbers →

Illustrative only, not a quote or pre-qualification. Uses the June 2026 median price and an ADR × occupancy revenue estimate, an indicative STR rate of 7.91% (10-year Treasury + a typical STR spread — see the live data dashboard), the market's effective tax rate, and estimated insurance. Gross revenue is before cleaning, management, utilities, and platform fees — lenders also haircut projected STR income. Actual numbers vary by property and borrower.

Strategy Check

STR vs long-term rental in Broken Bow

Short-term rental

Wins
Gross income
$3,650/mo
Est. PITIA @ 7.91%
$2,118/mo
Est. DSCR
1.72

Long-term rental

Lease rent
$1,200/mo
Est. PITIA @ 7.53%
$2,054/mo
Est. DSCR
0.58

Short-term wins on gross by about $2,450/month ($3,650 STR gross vs $1,200 lease rent) — that premium is what pays for furnishing, cleaning, and management, with margin left over if you operate well. Note the fallback: at 0.58 estimated LTR DSCR, lease rent alone doesn't carry the median purchase here — this market's debt wants nightly revenue behind it, so the STR permit picture matters doubly.

Regulation Reality

Can you legally run an STR in Broken Bow?

License required

Permissive: the newly incorporated Town of Hochatown (2022) requires a straightforward STR license and lodging-tax remittance, while unincorporated McCurtain County has no STR ordinance at all; a 2% county lodging tax passed in 2022.

For underwriting, a license requirement without a cap is friction, not risk: budget the registration cost and timeline, confirm the property type qualifies, and projected-income DSCR financing proceeds normally. The license is a checklist item, not a lottery ticket.

The Second-Home Angle

Your weekends plus rental income — two ways in

Dallas's cabin country — note the headline median reflects the modest in-town market, while purpose-built Hochatown STR cabins typically trade at $500K-$900K with pools, game rooms, and hot tubs.

That dual-use case — your own stays in the weeks you want, rental income the rest of the calendar — is what separates a vacation market from a spreadsheet market, and it opens a second financing door that pure investment properties don't get.

Second-home conventional

As little as 10% down and rates close to a primary residence. The trade: lenders require genuine personal use, qualify you on your own income (W2/DTI), and limit how much of the year the home can be rented out — and some restrict short-term renting entirely. Best when the house is mostly for you and the rental income is offset, not engine.

DSCR investment loan

Typically 20%+ down, priced off the property, and qualified on the property's rental revenue — projected STR income included — rather than your personal income. No personal-use restrictions: rent it 50 weeks, block your own July, run it like the business it is. Best when the income is the point.

Occupancy rules matter: misrepresenting a rental property as a second home is occupancy fraud. If you want unrestricted rental use, the DSCR route exists precisely so you don't have to stretch the truth.

Appreciation & Exit

The hold case in Broken Bow

Broken Bow has appreciated roughly 35% over the past five years — well ahead of typical national pace. That kind of run doesn't repeat on schedule, but it tells you demand for this market survived rate hikes that froze lesser vacation towns.

Exit liquidity in vacation markets is buyer-pool-dependent: you're selling to the next investor or second-home buyer, both of whom shop with the same seasonality and regulation facts you're reading now. A property with a transferable permit, a documented revenue history, and a real off-season strategy sells like an asset; one without them sells like a house.

Verdict — green light

The numbers work

  • The median deal carries itself: an estimated 1.72 DSCR at 20% down and a 14.4% gross yield.
  • Regulation is workable: Permissive: the newly incorporated Town of Hochatown (2022) requires a straightforward STR license and lodging-tax remittance, while unincorporated McCurtain County has no STR ordinance at all; a 2% county lodging tax passed in 2022.
  • Seasonality: Weekend-driven DFW traffic year-round, peaking in summer, October foliage, and the Christmas holidays; early fall is the rate trough and midweek occupancy is the structural weakness.

Underwrite with real comps, get insurance quoted early, and qualify on the property's projected revenue with a DSCR loan — Broken Bow is a market where the median deal already clears the bar.

Seasonality: Weekend-driven DFW traffic year-round, peaking in summer, October foliage, and the Christmas holidays; early fall is the rate trough and midweek occupancy is the structural weakness.

Data as of June 2026 — refreshed periodically. Town-level estimates for screening, not underwriting; verify comps, permits, and insurance quotes on the specific property.

Next Step

Get a quote from an STR expert who lends in Oklahoma

Real pricing on your actual deal — second-home and DSCR routes compared side by side, qualified on the property's income, no hard credit pull to see numbers.

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Broken Bow vacation rental FAQ

Is Broken Bow a good place to buy a vacation rental?

Yes, by our June 2026 numbers: a $300 ADR at 40% occupancy projects to roughly $43,800 a year gross (14.4% gross yield on the $305,000 median price), and the median deal pencils to an estimated 1.72 DSCR at 20% down under a license required regulatory regime. Verify property-level comps, permits, and insurance before buying.

Can I make money on Airbnb in Broken Bow?

The market math says yes: $300 ADR × 365 nights × 40% occupancy ≈ $43,800 a year ($3,650/month) gross before operating costs. Against an estimated $2,118/month PITIA on the median $305,000 purchase, that's roughly a 1.72 DSCR — real margin. Weekend-driven DFW traffic year-round, peaking in summer, October foliage, and the Christmas holidays; early fall is the rate trough and midweek occupancy is the structural weakness.

Can a Broken Bow property double as a second home?

Yes — and the dual-use case is much of the appeal. Dallas's cabin country — note the headline median reflects the modest in-town market, while purpose-built Hochatown STR cabins typically trade at $500K-$900K with pools, game rooms, and hot tubs. Two financing routes: a second-home conventional loan (as little as 10% down with owner-occupied-adjacent rates, but lenders impose personal-use and rental-day limits) or a DSCR investment loan (20%+ down, qualifies on the property's rental income, no personal-use restrictions). Most buyers choosing between them are really choosing between maximum leverage and maximum rental flexibility.

Run the numbers yourself

Compare with other vacation markets

STR guides for this strategy