Performance indicators for the Greenville short-term rental market based on reliable data.
Listings
Reliable / Active
Cap Rate
Middle-Earners Gross Yield
Revenue
Middle-Earners Revenue
Occupancy
Middle-Earners Occupancy
Home Value
Median Home Sale Price
Top Earners
Top-Earners Revenue
The highest-performing listings in Greenville.
Loading top listings...
Generally Investor friendly
Short-term rentals are explicitly allowed with minimal local restrictions; operators mainly follow straightforward state-level registration, insurance, and tax rules with no local caps or heavy fees. While new state rules add compliance, enforcement remains moderate and Greenville lacks specific restrictive ordinances, keeping startup manageable for investors.
Local STR Agent
STR specialist · Greenville, MS
Greenville sits in Washington County in the heart of the Mississippi Delta, a flat alluvial plain in the northwestern part of the state. It has a population of roughly 28,000 and carries the feel of a former cotton-trade hub that has reinvented itself as a cultural anchor for Delta music and food. The city is best known as a stop on the Mississippi Blues Trail and as a base for exploring the broader Delta region. It lies about 130 miles south of Memphis, Tennessee, and roughly 100 miles north of Jackson, Mississippi, with the Mississippi River running along its western edge.
Just north of town, Winterville Mounds is a state historic site preserving a series of large earthen mounds built by Mississippian-period Native Americans more than five hundred years ago. The site, designated a National Historic Landmark, includes a museum, a boardwalk through the plaza, and interpretive trails, and is reached in only a few minutes' drive from downtown Greenville.
About twenty-five miles south of the city, Leroy Percy State Park is one of the few state parks in the entire Delta region. Set along cypress-lined oxbow lakes, it offers camping, fishing, a nature trail, and bird-watching that draws visitors hoping to see herons, egrets, and migrating waterfowl. The drive from Greenville takes roughly thirty-five minutes, making it a popular day trip for anglers and families.
Greenville itself is steeped in blues heritage and is woven into the Mississippi Delta story told along the Highway 61 Blues Trail. Murals and historical markers throughout the downtown honor musicians with ties to the city, and the riverfront levee offers sweeping views of the Mississippi and a reminder of the waterway that long defined the town's economy. Less than an hour's drive north, the city of Clarksdale extends the blues trail experience with the Delta Blues Museum and live music venues.
Greenville appeals to short-term rental owners because it sits in a region with deep cultural identity and a steady flow of heritage travelers, anglers, and food tourists. Its small size keeps operating costs modest, while its proximity to a national historic site, a rare Delta state park, the Mississippi River, and the wider Blues Trail corridor gives visitors multiple reasons to stay a night or two rather than pass through. The combination of an authentic Delta atmosphere, manageable scale, and easy day-trip access to surrounding landmarks makes it a quietly compelling base for a vacation rental.