If you have been scrolling through RV park listings lately you already know the feeling. The photos look great, the location seems solid, and the revenue numbers the broker is showing you look attractive. So you start getting excited. You start running the math in your head. You maybe even start picturing yourself as the owner.
And then you dig in and realize the deal is nothing like what it appeared to be on the surface.
I have been there more times than I can count. I have underwritten RV park deals that looked incredible on a one page marketing flyer and fell completely apart under scrutiny. I have also passed on deals that looked rough on the outside and turned out to have real upside hiding underneath the surface numbers.
After doing this work over and over the same framework keeps proving itself. Here is exactly what I look at before I look at anything else.
The Revenue Mix Tells You Everything
Before I look at a single expense I want to understand how the revenue is being generated. Specifically I want to know the breakdown between long term tenants, short term seasonal guests, and transient nightly guests.
This matters more than most buyers realize. A park that generates 80% of its revenue from long term tenants looks stable on paper but carries significant risk. Long term tenants pay less per night, they are harder to remove if needed, and many lenders including SBA will not finance a park with that revenue composition. If you are planning to reposition the park toward higher paying short term guests you need to understand exactly what that transition looks like, how long it takes, and what happens to your cash flow during the process.
A healthy revenue mix for most acquisition purposes is somewhere around 60% short term and transient combined with no more than 40% long term. If the numbers are flipped that is not automatically a dealbreaker but it is the first conversation you need to have.
The Occupancy Number is Rarely What It Seems
Sellers love to quote peak season occupancy. What you need is annual average occupancy by site type and by month. Twelve months of data minimum. Ideally two to three years.
A park that runs at 95% occupancy in July and 20% in January is a very different investment than a park that runs at 70% occupancy year round. The blended annual average tells you the real story and it directly determines how you underwrite the income.
Also ask how many sites are actually available for rent versus taken offline for storage, employee use, or owner personal use. I have seen parks quote 150 sites where 30 of them were permanently occupied by staff or family members generating zero revenue. That changes your effective inventory and your income projections significantly.
The Seller’s NOI is a Starting Point Not a Destination
Every broker and seller will present you with a net operating income figure. Your job is to treat that number as a starting point for your own investigation, not a conclusion.
Here is what commonly gets left out of a seller’s NOI that you need to add back in as expenses before you can trust the number. Management fees are almost always missing if the owner is self managing. A professional management fee typically runs 8 to 12 percent of gross revenue. If you are not planning to self manage you need to include this. If you are planning to self manage you still need to include it because your time has value and you need to understand what the park looks like without you in it.
Owner salary is another common omission. If the owner is working full time in the park and not paying themselves a salary the expenses are understated. Capital expenditure history is almost always missing. When was the last time the roofs were replaced, the bathhouses were renovated, the electrical was upgraded? Deferred maintenance shows up in the purchase price negotiation and in your first year of ownership.
Legal and professional fees that spike in a single year are worth investigating. I have seen deals where a large legal fee appeared in one year of the financials that turned out to be related to a tenant dispute or regulatory issue that was never fully disclosed.
Infrastructure is Where Deals Go to Die
The physical infrastructure of an RV park is where deals go to die if you are not paying attention. Utility systems, septic, water, electrical, and roads are the unglamorous backbone of the operation and they are expensive to fix when they fail.
Here is what I specifically investigate on every deal. Who owns the utilities? A park on city water and sewer is a very different risk profile than a park on a private well and septic system. Private systems require regular maintenance, have finite lifespans, and can come with significant regulatory requirements depending on the state. Find out the age of every major system, when it was last serviced, and what the estimated remaining useful life is.
Roads and common areas are often overlooked. Gravel roads that have not been graded in years, drainage issues, and aging common area infrastructure all represent capital expenditure that needs to be budgeted. Walk the property on foot, not just in a car. The things you see on foot tell a completely different story than the aerial photos in the marketing package.
The Real Estate and the Business are Two Separate Things
One of the most common mistakes I see buyers make is evaluating the real estate and the business as one thing. They are not. You are buying both and they need to be evaluated separately.
The real estate question is straightforward. What is the land worth, what are the comparable sales in the area, and is the property appropriately zoned for its current and intended use? Are there any title issues, easements, or encumbrances that affect the property?
The business question is more nuanced. What systems are in place for reservations, guest management, and operations? Is there a management team or is everything dependent on the owner? What is the online reputation of the park on Google, Campendium, and The Dyrt? Reviews tell you what the financials cannot. They tell you whether guests are happy, whether the facilities are well maintained, and whether there are recurring issues that show up over and over in the comments.
A park with strong financials and terrible reviews is a business that is heading in the wrong direction. A park with modest financials and excellent reviews is a business with real upside potential.
The Lease and Permit Situation
If the park is on leased land rather than owned land this is the first thing I want to understand. What are the lease terms, what happens at expiration, is there a right of first refusal, and what does the rent escalation look like over time? A 25 year lease with a first right of refusal is very different from a 5 year lease with no renewal option.
Permits and licenses are equally important. Is the park operating with all required permits current and in good standing? Are there any open violations, pending regulatory actions, or zoning issues? In some states RV parks require specific operating licenses and the transfer of those licenses to a new owner is not always automatic. Find out before you close, not after.
My Final Rule
After doing this work across dozens of deals I have one rule that I always come back to. Never fall in love with a deal before you have verified the numbers yourself.
The seller’s package is a marketing document. The broker’s pro forma is an optimistic projection. Your job as the buyer is to reconstruct the financials from scratch using verified data, apply your own expense assumptions, and determine what the property is worth to you at your required return, not what the seller thinks it is worth to them.
If the deal still works after you have done that work it is worth pursuing. If it does not you just saved yourself from a very expensive mistake.
That is the job. And if you want someone in your corner who has done this work on real deals and knows exactly what to look for, that is exactly what I do at PVI Financial.
Reach out at pvifinancial.com and let’s take a look at what you are working with.
Click here to read “What is NOI? And How To Find the REAL Number in an Acquisition”

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