Hotel-Concept Rental Pools in Alanya: What 'Guaranteed Yield' Really Commits To

July 5, 2026|Updated June 22, 2026|11 min read

Hotel-concept (otel konsept) residences are everywhere in Alanya's new-build market, and they are usually sold to foreign buyers with one headline number: a guaranteed rental return, often 8%, sometimes 9% or 10%. That number does a lot of work in a sales meeting. It is also the part of the deal that deserves the most suspicion.

This guide explains how these managed rental pools actually distribute income, why the guarantee is frequently a marketing instrument rather than an investment return, and exactly which contract clauses decide whether you keep your money. It is written for the buyer who wants the upside of a serviced holiday-let without signing a contract they have not read line by line.

How a hotel-concept rental pool actually works

In a hotel-concept residence, eligible apartments are operated as short-term, serviced lets by the developer or an affiliated management company. Guests across the whole building book through the operator. All of that guest revenue flows into a single pool. The operator then deducts operating costs and a management fee, and distributes what is left to owners.

The distribution happens one of two ways, and the difference matters:

  • By unit-nights let — you are paid according to how many nights your specific apartment was actually rented.
  • Pro-rata by ownership share — you are paid a slice of the whole pool based on the size or value of your unit, regardless of whether your unit was the one occupied.

Neither is automatically better, but the formula is set entirely by contract, and most owners never receive a unit-level revenue breakdown. The pool is opaque by design. If the contract does not state the distribution formula in plain language, you cannot model your return at all — you are trusting the operator's word.

The skeptical baseline: what yields are actually achievable

Before looking at any guarantee, anchor yourself to reality. Legitimate gross rental yields in major Turkish cities run around 5%, broadly comparable to London or New York. Alanya holiday-lets are commonly cited at 6–8% gross. Those are gross figures — before fees, maintenance and tax.

So treat any guaranteed headline of 8–10%+ as a claim that exceeds what the underlying property can organically produce. The gap between the achievable yield and the guaranteed yield has to be funded by someone. Often, it is funded by you.

The cash-back guarantee: a developer claim, not a return

The single biggest red flag in this market is the cash-back guarantee. Here is the documented mechanism, drawn from a well-known Istanbul example:

  1. The developer inflates the headline sale price of the unit.
  2. Part of your own down payment is quietly returned to you over the following years, relabelled as guaranteed rent.
  3. You feel like you are receiving a high yield. In reality you are being paid back with money you already handed over — having overpaid for the property in the first place.

The Istanbul case made the maths explicit: the real achievable yield was about 4.5%, but the unit was sold with a guaranteed 8%. The developer subsidised the 3.5%/year gap for 5 years — 17.5% in total — straight out of the buyer's roughly 35% deposit. The "return" was the buyer's own capital, recycled.

This is why a guaranteed-yield headline should be read as a developer marketing claim, not a corroborated investment fact. A genuine 8%+ net return is rare; an 8%+ guaranteed number printed on a brochure is common. The two are not the same thing.

What a 'guaranteed yield' contract really commits to

Strip away the brochure and a typical guaranteed-yield structure looks like this:

  • A fixed return — marketed anywhere from 5% to 10% — for a defined window of 3 to 5 years.
  • Payment "whether the property is rented or not" during that window only.
  • Conversion to performance-based pool sharing with no floor once the window expires.

The guarantee period is the bait. The open-ended pool years that follow carry the real occupancy risk, and in seasonal Alanya — packed in summer, quiet in winter — the actual pool distribution after the guarantee can be a fraction of the guaranteed figure.

Crucially, the guarantee is only as strong as the developer's balance sheet. You are paid the fixed amount only while the developer remains solvent and willing. The headline rate tells you almost nothing; the wording and the developer's finances tell you everything.

Fee and aidat drag: where the yield quietly disappears

Even an honest pool loses a large share of gross revenue before it reaches you. Two costs do most of the damage.

Management and operating fees. Rental-management companies typically take 5–10% of rental income. On top of that, hotel-concept operations layer in cleaning, linens, front-desk staffing, OTA/booking-platform commissions and utilities for let periods — all deducted before any distribution.

Aidat (maintenance fee). This is the silent killer in amenity-heavy complexes. Pools, an aquapark, a spa, a 24-hour restaurant, security and landscaping all cost money to run, and that cost is spread across owners as monthly aidat. For small units — 1+0 and 1+1 apartments — the aidat can be disproportionately large relative to the rent the unit can earn, eroding net yield and making the unit harder to both rent and resell.

The table below shows how an attractive gross figure deflates once these costs and tax are applied. Figures are illustrative ranges drawn from typical market costs, not a promise.

Line itemOptimistic caseRealistic case
Marketed / guaranteed gross yield8.0%8.0%
Less management fee (5–10% of income)−0.6%−0.8%
Less operating costs (cleaning, OTA, utilities)−0.8%−1.6%
Less aidat (heavy for small units)−1.0%−2.2%
Sub-total before tax5.6%3.4%
Less income tax (15–40% on net profit)−0.9%−0.8%
Net yield in your pocket~4.7%~2.6%

The lesson is blunt: a gross 8% can land near 3–4% net once aidat, management fee and tax are paid. That is why net-versus-gross is the single most important clause in the entire contract.

Net vs gross: the clause that decides everything

Contracts quote either a guaranteed net or a guaranteed gross figure. If the guarantee is gross, you — not the operator — still absorb aidat, the management fee, income tax and insurance. Demand that the guarantee be defined explicitly, in writing, as net of both aidat AND the management fee. If the developer resists putting that in the contract, you have your answer about what the headline number really means.

The escape clauses that let a developer stop paying

A guarantee is a promise, and promises in these contracts come with exits. Hunt for every one of these before signing:

  • Installment trap. The guarantee is voided if you are late on any payment installment.
  • Unilateral expense deduction. Payouts made only "after deduction of operating expenses" that the operator defines on its own terms.
  • Unit substitution. The operator reserves the right to rotate or substitute which unit is actually let.
  • Project-wide occupancy basis. The guarantee is tied to building-wide occupancy thresholds rather than your individual unit's performance.
  • Force majeure / market conditions. Broad clauses that suspend payments when "market conditions" deteriorate.
  • Penalty-free developer exit. The developer can walk away from the management agreement without penalty.

Each of these can turn a guaranteed return into nothing. Insist they be removed or capped.

The legal layer: licensing, caps and fines

A hotel-concept pool only works if the units can legally be short-let. Since Law No. 7464 (Official Gazette November 2023, effective January 2024), renting for under 100 days requires an official Tourism Residence Permit (Turizm Konutu İzin Belgesi), applied for on e-devlet at roughly 10,000 TL (~$270). Only the property owner can hold the permit.

Two constraints can break a pool entirely:

  • Management-board approval is required, and regulation limits how many units in a single building may operate as short-term rentals — reported as a 25% cap (with high co-owner consent also commonly cited). If the cap is already met, your unit may legally be unable to enter the pool at all.
  • Fines fall on the owner, not the operator. Operating without a license can reach 1,000,000 TL; advertising an unlicensed property 100,000–500,000 TL; failing to report guests up to 500,000 TL. All rent must move by bank transfer — cash is prohibited.

Verify the project's permit status and STR quota before buying, and confirm the operator carries valid permits rather than just marketing claims. For foreign owners there is an extra wrinkle: actively running a short-let yourself can be classed as commercial activity requiring a work permit. In a pool the operator usually conducts the activity — but confirm the legal vehicle so you are receiving rental income, not unknowingly conducting unlicensed commerce.

Taxes and acquisition costs

For a non-resident foreign owner:

  • Rental income tax is progressive at 15%–40% on net profit. For residential lettings, 2026 income below TRY 58,000 is exempt and need not be declared. Aidat, management fees, repairs and insurance are deductible against the taxable base. Annual declaration and official records are mandatory.
  • VAT is generally exempt for a non-resident buying a brand-new unit directly from the developer and paying in foreign currency converted via the Turkish Central Bank; resale between private parties carries no VAT.
  • Title-deed fee (Tapu Harcı) is 4% of declared value (legally split 2%/2% buyer/seller, but often paid in full by the buyer).
  • Annual property tax on residential is 0.1–0.2%, doubled in metropolitan municipalities such as Antalya — which includes Alanya.

Exit liquidity: the part nobody markets

The concept carries a price premium. Apartments in buildings whose charter grants short-term-rental rights / hotel-concept management sell roughly 10–15% more expensive than buildings restricted to long-term leases. That premium directly lowers your real yield-on-cost — and the guaranteed headline conveniently hides it.

Resale is the other hidden cost. Alanya resale liquidity is moderate and driven by seasonal foreign buyers; the most liquid stock is central, near Cleopatra Beach, where land scarcity supports values. A unit locked into a developer's management or guarantee contract can be harder to resell, because the next buyer may inherit the contract, the inflated entry price and the high aidat. Discount your exit assumption accordingly.

Developer-default protection exists but is slow. Under the Turkish Consumer Protection Law, developers of large projects (30+ units) must provide a building-completion bank guarantee or completion insurance, and in bankruptcy the buyer keeps creditor priority. But a rent-guarantee shortfall is enforced through the Consumer Court (Tüketici Mahkemesi) and can take a long time. The guarantee is only ever as strong as the developer's solvency.

The pre-signature checklist

Before you sign anything, get all of the following in writing:

#Clause to verifyWhy it matters
1Yield defined NET of aidat and management feeA "gross" guarantee can halve your real return
2Exact pool distribution formula (unit-nights vs ownership share)Determines whether you are paid for your unit or the building
3Guarantee duration and what replaces it on expiryThe post-guarantee years carry the real risk
4Developer-default remedy + bank guarantee / completion insuranceYour protection if the developer fails
5Every escape / force-majeure clauseThese can void the guarantee entirely
6Current aidat schedule + year-on-year increasesAidat can swallow small-unit yield
7Valid Tourism Residence Permit + building under 25% STR capWithout it, the unit cannot legally enter the pool
8Sale price at or above independent market valuationDetects cash-back price inflation
9Personal-use rights and blackout datesWhen you can actually use your own property
10Penalties for early exit from the management agreementYour ability to leave the pool

The bottom line

A hotel-concept rental pool can be a legitimate way to own a serviced holiday-let without managing it yourself. But the guaranteed yield that sells it is the least reliable figure in the deal. Anchor to organic Alanya yields of 6–8% gross, assume fees and aidat will cut that toward 3–4% net, treat any 8%+ guarantee as a developer claim that must survive the cash-back test, and refuse to sign until every clause above is documented. The honest projects will put it all in writing. The ones that won't are telling you something.

What is a hotel-concept (otel konsept) residence in Alanya and how does its rental pool work?

It is a residential complex run with hotel-style amenities and services where eligible apartments are operated as short-term/serviced lets. Guest revenue across participating units is collected into one pool; the operator deducts operating costs and a management fee, then distributes the net to owners either by the nights each unit was actually let or pro-rata by ownership share. The exact distribution formula is set by contract and is often not transparent at the individual-unit level, so it must be read carefully before buying.

Are 'guaranteed rental return' offers of 8–10% in Alanya real, or marketing?

Treat any guarantee well above the organic market as marketing. Legitimate gross yields in major Turkish cities are around 5%, and Alanya holiday lets are commonly cited at 6–8%. A widely reported 'cash-back' trick inflates the sale price and pays part of the buyer's own deposit back as 'rent' — for example a real 4.5% yield dressed up as a guaranteed 8% means the developer subsidises 3.5% a year for five years (17.5% total) out of money the buyer already paid. If anyone offers 8%+ guaranteed, assume it is a gimmick until proven otherwise.

What does a 'guaranteed yield' contract actually commit the developer to?

Usually a fixed return (commonly marketed at 5–10%) for a defined period of 3–5 years, paid whether or not the unit is occupied — but only while the developer stays solvent and the contract conditions are met. After the guarantee period it typically converts to performance-based pool sharing with no floor. The legal force of the guarantee depends entirely on the developer's balance sheet and the precise wording, so the headline rate alone tells you little.

What are the most common escape clauses that let a developer stop paying the guarantee?

Watch for: the guarantee being voided if you are late on any installment; payouts made only 'after deduction of operating expenses' the operator defines unilaterally; the guarantee tied to project-wide occupancy rather than your unit; force-majeure or 'market conditions' clauses that suspend payments; and a penalty-free right for the developer to exit the management agreement. Each of these can turn a 'guaranteed' return into nothing, so insist they be removed or capped before signing.

How much do management fees and aidat (maintenance) reduce my net return?

Rental-management companies typically take 5–10% of rental income, and hotel-concept operations add cleaning, booking commissions and front-desk costs on top. Separately, aidat in amenity-heavy complexes (pools, aquapark, spa, security) can be very high — disproportionately so for small 1+0 and 1+1 units, where it can swallow a large share of the rent. A quoted 'gross' yield can fall to roughly half once aidat, management fee and tax are paid, so always confirm whether the number is gross or net.

Do I need a license to short-term rent my Alanya apartment, and who can hold it?

Yes. Under Law No. 7464 (effective January 2024), renting for under 100 days requires an official Tourism Residence Permit (Turizm Konutu İzin Belgesi), obtained via e-devlet for roughly 10,000 TL (about $270). Only the property owner can apply, management-board approval is required, and regulation limits the share of units in a building that may operate as short-term rentals (reported as 25%). Operating without a license can be fined up to 1,000,000 TL.

What happens to my income if occupancy underperforms after the guarantee period ends?

During a genuine guarantee window you are paid the fixed amount regardless of occupancy, provided the developer remains solvent. Once that window expires, income reverts to the actual pool result — and Alanya is highly seasonal, with demand spiking in summer and dropping sharply in winter. Real distributions after the guarantee can be a fraction of the guaranteed figure, so model the post-guarantee years on realistic seasonal occupancy, not the marketed rate.

How is rental income from a hotel-concept residence taxed for a foreign owner?

Non-resident owners pay progressive income tax of 15%–40% on net rental profit, with annual declaration and official records required and all rent paid by bank transfer. For residential lettings, 2026 income below TRY 58,000 is exempt. Deductible expenses — aidat, management fees, repairs and insurance — reduce the taxable base. Actively running a short-let yourself can count as commercial activity requiring a work permit, though in a pool the operator usually conducts the activity.

How easy is it to resell a hotel-concept unit, and what hurts the exit price?

Alanya resale liquidity is moderate and driven by seasonal foreign buyers, with central locations near Cleopatra Beach the most liquid. A hotel-concept unit can be harder to exit because the buyer may inherit the management/guarantee contract, an entry price inflated 10–15% over long-lease-only stock, and high aidat. If the developer defaults, the law gives buyers creditor priority and large projects (30+ units) must carry completion insurance or a bank guarantee, but recovery via the Consumer Court is slow.

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