Buying & investing

ROI on Vacation Rentals in Hurghada: Realistic Numbers

Discover real rental yields, occupancy rates, and income potential for Hurghada real estate in 2026. Data-driven insights on vacation rentals, seasonality, and ROI in Egypt’s Red Sea market.

ROI on Vacation Rentals in Hurghada: Realistic Numbers
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What yields, occupancy rates, and income can you actually expect? We break down the data - without the sales pitch.

 

7–10%

Gross rental yield

53%

Median occupancy

12mo

Tourism season

 

In this guide

01  Why Hurghada works as an investment market

02  Rental yield data: the actual numbers

03  Understanding Hurghada's seasonality

04  A worked example: what your numbers might look like

05  Short-term vs long-term rentals: which strategy fits you

06  What drives performance up or down

07  Honest assessment: the risks to know

 

Hurghada gets talked about a lot in investment circles, and the claims can range from the conservative to the extraordinary. Our aim with this guide is simple: give you the clearest, most grounded picture of what a vacation rental property in Hurghada can realistically earn — based on actual market data, not promotional projections.

We draw on data from multiple sources including Global Property Guide's Q4 2025 survey, short-term rental analytics platforms tracking over 3,000 active listings in Hurghada, and published market research from real estate agencies active in the Red Sea region.

 

Why Hurghada Works as an Investment Market

Most beach resort property markets suffer from the same structural problem: they're seasonal. Six months of strong income, six months of near-zero demand. Hurghada is an exception — and that exception is the foundation of its investment case.

The city's location on the Red Sea gives it a genuine year-round climate. Winters are mild and sunny, drawing visitors from Russia, Eastern Europe, and the Gulf seeking warmth when their home countries are cold. Summers, while hot, attract domestic Egyptian travelers and Gulf families seeking beach holidays. Spring and autumn are peak diving and water-sports season, pulling in a distinct international audience.

The result is a tourism market that operates across all twelve months — something you cannot say about comparable coastal markets in Turkey, Spain, or even parts of Greece. This year-round demand directly translates into more bookable nights, more consistent occupancy, and more predictable rental income.

Market context

Hurghada receives over 2 million tourists annually. The city has an established and growing expat community that supports long-term rental demand alongside the short-term vacation market — giving investors two distinct income strategies to choose between or combine.

A second structural advantage is price. Compared to property markets in Turkey, Cyprus, Greece, or Dubai, Hurghada entry prices are significantly lower for equivalent quality. Lower acquisition costs mean the same rental income generates a higher percentage yield — which is why Hurghada's gross yields consistently exceed most Mediterranean alternatives.

 

Rental Yield Data: The Actual Numbers

Rental yield measures your annual rental income as a percentage of the property's purchase price. Here is what the data shows for Hurghada specifically.

Hurghada market data — 2025

7.3%

City average gross yield (Q4 2025)

53%

Median annual occupancy (STR)

$60

Average nightly rate (USD)

$10K

Avg annual STR revenue

 

The city average gross yield of 7.3% in Q4 2025, per Global Property Guide's Egypt residential market survey, sits well above Egypt's national average of 6.72%. Studios and one-bedroom units outperform the average, with yields of 8%+ in well-located vacation areas. Premium beachfront or sea-view properties in managed resort communities have been cited at 8–10% in multiple market reports.

For context: the UK buy-to-let market averages around 4–5% gross yield, Portugal's Algarve sits at roughly 4–6%, and most of Spain's costas range between 3–5%. Hurghada's 7–10% range is materially stronger — and that's before accounting for property price appreciation.

Market Avg. Gross Yield Avg. Entry Price (1-bed) Year-round season?
Hurghada, Egypt 7–10% $25,000–70,000 Yes
Algarve, Portugal 4–6% $200,000–400,000 Partial
Costa del Sol, Spain 3–5% $150,000–350,000 Partial
Turkish Riviera 4–6% $60,000–200,000 Partial
Dubai, UAE 5–7% $150,000–400,000 Yes

Note that these are gross yields — before management fees, maintenance, taxes, and vacancy. We address net yield and costs in detail in the worked example below.

 

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Understanding Hurghada's Seasonality

Even in a year-round market, occupancy is not uniform. Understanding the seasonal rhythm helps you price smartly, plan maintenance windows, and model income accurately.

Short-term rental occupancy in Hurghada follows a clear seasonal pattern, driven by weather, tourism flows, and holiday demand.

At the start of the year (January to April), occupancy levels are consistently strong.

  • January and April stand out as peak months, with occupancy reaching approximately 70–75%, driven by winter sun tourism and Easter holidays.
  • February and March remain highly active, maintaining high occupancy levels (55–65%), making this period attractive for steady rental income.

As the market transitions into late spring and early summer (May to June), occupancy begins to decline.

  • May drops into a moderate range (around 35–50%), as temperatures rise and international tourist flow slows.
  • June typically marks the lowest point of the year, with occupancy at its weakest due to the start of the hotter season.

During mid-summer (July to August), the market begins to recover gradually.

  • Occupancy improves slightly but remains within the moderate range, supported mainly by regional tourism and domestic travel.

From September onwards, demand starts to pick up again.

  • September sees a return to high occupancy levels (55–65%), as the weather becomes more favorable.

The final quarter of the year (October to December) represents the strongest and most consistent performance period.

  • October, November, and December all fall within the peak occupancy range (70–75%), driven by ideal weather conditions and increased international travel during the winter season.

October and April are consistently the strongest months for vacation rental occupancy, coinciding with peak diving season and moderate temperatures. December and January are also strong, driven by winter sun-seeking visitors from Russia and Eastern Europe. The quieter window typically falls in May and June — though even in these months, demand does not collapse the way it does in purely seasonal markets.

For well-managed properties in prime locations — particularly beachfront or within resort communities — peak season occupancy can reach 75%. The annual median across the broader market sits at approximately 53%.

 

Pricing tip

Properties that flex their nightly rate dynamically across seasons — charging 30–50% premiums during October, April, and December — consistently outperform those with fixed pricing. The short average booking lead time of 19 days in Hurghada also favors a dynamic pricing approach.

 

A Worked Example: What Your Numbers Might Look Like

Abstract percentages are useful, but a concrete scenario is more instructive. Here is a conservative-to-realistic model for a one-bedroom apartment in a managed resort community in Hurghada — a typical entry-level investment.

Scenario: 1-bed apartment, resort community

"A furnished studio in a beachfront compound, purchased for $45,000"

Purchase price $45,000
Avg. nightly rate (blended across seasons) $55/night
Annual occupancy (conservative, 50%) 182 nights
Gross annual rental income $10,010
Management fee (15–20%) − $1,700
Maintenance, utilities, platform fees (~10%) − $1,000
Net annual income ~$7,300

Net yield

~16%

At a higher occupancy rate (60–65%), which is realistic for a well-managed, well-located property in peak periods, net income climbs toward $9,000–$10,500, pushing net yields above 20% on a $45,000 acquisition. Even at the conservative end, these are returns that compare exceptionally well with most international alternatives.

Capital appreciation — the second return

Egyptian real estate prices rose approximately 18% in 2024 (nominally), and premium Red Sea areas have seen 15–20% appreciation over the past three years according to published market data. While past performance does not guarantee future results, this appreciation layer means your total return — income yield plus capital gain — has the potential to substantially exceed the yield figure alone.

 

Short-Term vs Long-Term Rentals: Which Strategy Fits You?

Hurghada supports both approaches, and the right choice depends on your priorities, how hands-on you want to be, and the specific property you own.

Short-term (vacation rental)

  • Higher income potential
  • Flexible personal use of property
  • Dynamic pricing captures peak season premiums
  • 72% of guests in Hurghada are international travellers
  • Works well for furnished resort-community units

Watch points (short-term)

  • Requires active management or a management fee
  • Higher turnover and maintenance
  • Seasonal gaps need to be planned for
  • Platform fees (Airbnb, Booking.com) reduce revenue

Long-term rentals offer more predictable monthly income with less management overhead. Hurghada's growing expat population and remote worker community drive stable demand for furnished apartments on 6–12 month leases. Gross yields for long-term rentals in Hurghada average 5.86–8.08% per Global Property Guide data, with the sweet spot in the 7–8% range for one and two-bedroom units.

Many experienced investors combine both: long-term tenants through the quieter summer months, and short-term vacation rental income through autumn, winter, and spring peaks. This hybrid approach smooths income while maximising peak-period revenue.

 

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What Drives Performance Up or Down

Location within Hurghada

This is the single biggest variable. Properties within resort communities and gated beachfront compounds consistently outperform those in less tourist-accessible areas. Al Mamsha, Sahl Hasheesh, and managed coastal compounds have demonstrated the strongest short-term rental performance. Central Hurghada and El Dahar tend to deliver more stable long-term rental income.

Property type and size

Studios and one-bedroom apartments generate the highest yields per square metre — they appeal to couples, solo travelers, and small families, which represent the core demand segment. Data shows that 1-bedroom and 2-bedroom properties account for 80% of active Hurghada short-term rental listings, reflecting where demand concentrates. Larger villas can command higher nightly rates but typically see lower occupancy and longer vacancy periods.

Management quality

A well-managed listing — professional photography, competitive pricing, responsive communication, and consistent maintenance — can outperform an equivalent but poorly managed property by 20–30% on annual revenue. If you are not based in Hurghada, a reliable local property manager is not optional; it is essential. Management fees typically run 15–20% of revenue.

Furnishing and amenities

The most common guest request in Hurghada short-term rentals centres on pool access, sea views, air conditioning, and modern furnishing. Properties within compounds that include beach access or pool facilities consistently rate higher and achieve above-average occupancy.

 

Honest Assessment: The Risks to Know

No investment comes without risk, and we would be doing you a disservice by omitting the considerations that can affect returns.

Factors supporting the market

  • Year-round tourism base
  • Low entry prices relative to yields
  • Growing international buyer interest
  • Government infrastructure investment
  • Foreign freehold rights clearly established in Red Sea zone

Risks to factor in

  • Egyptian pound currency fluctuation
  • Management quality varies widely
  • Off-plan developer risk on unregistered projects
  • Supply growth from new developments
  • Regulatory changes affecting STR licensing

Currency note

Rental income in Hurghada is typically quoted and earned in Egyptian Pounds or USD depending on the rental model. The Egyptian Pound has experienced significant devaluation in recent years. Investors whose home currency is USD, EUR, or GCC currencies (pegged to USD) benefit from this dynamic — buying assets priced in a relatively weak currency while potentially earning rents in dollars from international guests.

Off-plan caution

Off-plan properties in Hurghada can offer attractive payment plans, but always verify that the developer holds clear land title and that the project has proper permits before committing funds. Work with an independent lawyer for every purchase — not just the developer's in-house team.

The Hurghada market has demonstrated resilience across multiple cycles, and the structural demand drivers — climate, tourism infrastructure, and relatively low global profile meaning lower competition from speculative capital — remain intact. But as with any property investment, due diligence, a clear strategy, and professional local support are non-negotiable.

 

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