From four thousand kilometers away, everything looked fine. The villa was booked. Money arrived most months. The manager answered emails, eventually.
The owners were busy people, and “fine” is a sedative. It took a guest’s offhand text — a friend of a friend who’d stayed there — to break the spell: “Gorgeous house. Felt a bit tired, though? And the welcome was chaotic.”
Tired? They’d been paying for maintenance monthly. Chaotic? They’d been paying for guest services too.
The audit they finally commissioned read like a slow leak. Repairs billed at handsome markups through a contractor who turned out to share an address with the management company. Cleaning fees charged to guests at one rate and reported to owners at another. Reviews drifting from 4.9 to 4.6 — each tenth of a point quietly repricing the property downward. No monthly statement had ever itemized any of it.
Nothing was dramatic. That was the problem. Underperformance compounds politely.
The switch took one month and a difficult phone call. The new firm sent a seventeen-page onboarding audit, photographed every room, rebuilt the listing, and delivered the first owner statement the owners had ever actually been able to read.
Revenue rose. But the number that moved first was smaller and more telling: the response time to a guest inquiry dropped from nine hours to nine minutes. Reviews followed. Rates followed the reviews.
Underperformance compounds politely. Nothing was dramatic — that was the problem.
The Story Timeline
The Cost
Lessons For Future Buyers
Insider Perspective
The management relationship is the single biggest controllable variable in rental performance — bigger than the property itself in most cases. It's why vetting managers is the busiest category in our network: the good ones are obvious within three owner phone calls.
Where They Are Now
They tell new owners two things now: read the statement before you admire the deposit, and the absence of bad news is not the same as good news.
Considering Tamarindo? You can read the unfiltered local take on this area, or talk it through with us before you fall in love with anything.