The True Cost of Tenant Turnover in Denver (It's More Than You Think)
A tenant gives notice. You think: no big deal, I will find someone new in a couple weeks. Then you see the property after move-out.
The Full Cost of One Turnover in Denver
Lost rent during vacancy: 30-45 days average in Denver = $2,000-$3,500. Make-ready costs: Cleaning ($200-$400), paint touch-up ($400-$800), carpet cleaning or replacement ($300-$1,500), minor repairs ($200-$600). Leasing costs: Photography, listing, showing time, screening. Administrative costs: Lease preparation, move-in inspection, utility coordination.
Conservative total: $3,500-$6,500 per turnover.
Now multiply that by the number of turnovers over a 10-year hold. If you turn over every 18 months instead of every 30 months, you will have 6-7 turnovers instead of 3-4. That difference is $15,000-$25,000 in additional costs.
Why Denver Turnover Is Especially Expensive
Denver's mix of historic homes and newer suburban developments means make-ready costs vary dramatically. A turnover in Capitol Hill costs differently than one in Aurora. Seasonal timing matters too: a December vacancy in Denver takes 2-3 weeks longer to fill than a June vacancy.
How to Reduce Turnover
Maintain the property proactively. Tenants leave properties that feel neglected. Responding to maintenance requests within 24-48 hours makes tenants feel valued.
Price renewals fairly. A 3-5% increase retains good tenants. A 10% increase sends them shopping. Know the difference.
Communicate consistently. Tenants who feel ignored look for reasons to leave. Tenants who feel heard look for reasons to stay.
Start the renewal conversation 90 days out. Do not wait until 30 days before lease expiration. By then, they have already been browsing listings.
The cheapest tenant to acquire is the one you already have.
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