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Gatlinburg Vacation Rental Occupancy Plummets as Investor Returns Hit by Market Saturation

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Date:
27 Jan 2026
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Vacation rental occupancy rates in Gatlinburg have plunged from peaks of 80 percent in 2021 to about 53 percent today, according to Deanna Workman, a REALTOR® with Century 21 Legacy GP who specializes in Smoky Mountains properties. Workman says the cause is not fewer tourists or new regulations, but a flood of new vacation rentals that has fundamentally changed the region’s investment landscape.

“Originally, back in 2020, we didn’t have as many brand new builds. You didn’t have as many options,” Workman says. Now, with several hundred additional homes on the market, the competition for renters has intensified. She attributes the steep decline in occupancy to rapid supply growth, not to a drop in visitor demand.

A Surge in Supply Reshapes Returns

In the past few years, Gatlinburg has seen hundreds of newly constructed vacation rentals, many with features designed to stand out, such as in-ground pools, indoor putting greens, and complete entertainment suites. Developers are targeting the same pool of tourists with increasingly elaborate properties.

“There are so many going up, and that’s why you’re seeing the drop in the numbers, because we still have the same amount of people coming in, if not more,” Workman explains. “But when you have so many houses, you can only fill so many with that same number of people.”

The practical effect is that the same number of visitors is now spread across a much larger number of rentals. This has pushed down both occupancy rates and the nightly prices owners can charge. For investors who bought during the boom years of 2020 and 2021, the new math is sobering: properties that once generated strong cash flow now struggle to meet the same income targets.

Workman points out that raising nightly rates to compensate for lower occupancy often backfires, as price-sensitive renters seek cheaper alternatives. “When you increase that number, people look at it as, okay, well, since that’s a really high nightly rate, I’m gonna go here try to find something cheaper so it keeps that occupancy down too,” she says.

Price Point Now Dictates Market Performance

Supply saturation has split the market. According to Workman, properties over $2 million are taking the longest to sell, as buyers prioritize the income stability of owning multiple mid-priced rentals over that of a single luxury investment.

“The ones you see sitting longer are over a million, the ones over two and three million, of course, they’re going to sit the longest,” Workman says. She notes that many investors now prefer acquiring two $600,000 cabins with dual income streams to a single $1.2 million property.

She adds that homes with premium amenities and prime locations are still moving, while mid-range properties without standout features are lingering on the market. Factors like road access, proximity to attractions, and distance from neighbors, once secondary, have become critical to rental performance as competition intensifies.

A New Standard for Due Diligence

Workman says that in response to falling occupancy, experienced investors have dramatically increased their due diligence. Where buyers once relied on simple projections or recent rental history, they now demand multi-year performance records, side-by-side property management comparisons, and conservative income models.

“Because of the shift of occupancy being so high and the occupancy dropping so low, it’s significantly more due diligence,” Workman says. “We want all the paperwork that we can get. We want to go back three or four years in history, at least if you’ve got it. We want projections from multiple different companies.”

She says investors are scrutinizing property management firms more closely, looking beyond fees to evaluate marketing capabilities, online reviews, and proven performance with similar properties. The era of quick deals based on amenities and location alone is over.

When asked what risk buyers most underestimate, Workman is clear: “Market saturation, definitely. I would say that’s probably the biggest impact all the way around, for all aspects.”

How Brokerages Are Responding

Century 21 Legacy GP has adapted to these new conditions by offering clients detailed financial models that incorporate historical rental data, projections from various property management companies, and analyses of factors such as road conditions and seasonal access.

“I really like to talk through all numbers. We get projections from multiple companies. We get rental history, if there is any on the property,” Workman says. “I don’t want you to buy an $800,000 house, and it’s only going to make $40,000 a year gross, because you’re going to be in the hole.”

Despite the more challenging environment, Workman reports that her office has exceeded goals for closings and listings, indicating that investors who do their homework and adjust expectations can still succeed. She suggests that whether other brokerages follow suit with thorough pre-purchase analysis may determine which investors weather the oversupplied market.

Looking Ahead: What Investors Must Know Now

The rapid drop in occupancy rates and the surge in supply have fundamentally changed the Gatlinburg vacation rental market. Investors can no longer rely on past performance or assume that high demand will offset rising competition. Instead, success in 2026 and beyond will depend on rigorous due diligence, realistic income projections, and a willingness to adapt to a market where only the best-located and most distinctive properties are likely to achieve strong returns.

As Workman’s experience shows, investors who recognize the risks of market saturation—and respond with deeper analysis and careful selection—are best positioned to navigate the new realities of Smoky Mountains vacation rental investing. Those who ignore these shifts risk falling short of their financial goals in a market where supply, not demand, is now the driving force.