For Owners
Villa Management Fees on Koh Samui: Real Numbers, Real Tradeoffs
Three fee structures, what each one actually covers, and how to build an apples-to-apples comparison so a 12% quote doesn't end up costing you 38%.
By Adam Tokar — Portfolio Manager • Published 2026-07-02 • Category: For Owners
The most misleading number in villa management is the headline fee percentage. A company quoting 12% and a company quoting 20% are not necessarily 8 percentage points apart in what they cost you — because the 12% quote may exclude cleaning coordination, maintenance calls, owner accounting, and half the guest communications that keep your reviews high. Before you choose a management structure based on a percentage, you need to know what that percentage covers and what it doesn't.
This article walks through the three fee structures you'll encounter on Koh Samui, what each actually includes when done honestly, and how our own tiers are structured so you can place them in context.
The three fee structures on Koh Samui
1. Full-service percentage of gross (25–35%)
The full-service model charges a single percentage of your gross rental revenue — every baht the villa earns before OTA commissions and operating costs are deducted. A well-designed full-service agreement at this level should include:
- OTA distribution: Listing creation, content updates, and calendar management across multiple booking channels — not just one platform
- Dynamic pricing: Active rate management using tools like PriceLabs, with Samui-specific seasonality configuration and ongoing monitoring
- Guest communications: All inquiry responses, pre-arrival coordination, in-stay support, and post-checkout follow-up — handled within the response time thresholds that affect platform rankings
- Cleaning coordination: Scheduling housekeeping for every turnover, quality-checking results, and handling the inevitable rebooking when a team is unavailable on a short-notice date
- Maintenance triage: Receiving and assessing repair requests, sourcing the right supplier, supervising the work, and reporting back to the owner — not just forwarding a contractor's phone number
- Monthly owner accounting: A structured statement showing gross revenue by channel, all deductions itemised, and net to owner — delivered by a fixed date each month
- Owner portal access: Real-time visibility into your booking calendar, earnings, and maintenance log
At this fee level, the items typically not included are the actual housekeeping cost (charged per turnover at cost), utility bills, and capital repairs above a defined threshold (usually THB 3,000–5,000 per incident). These are pass-through costs that belong to the property, not the management operation.
2. Hybrid: base retainer plus lower percentage (varies)
The hybrid model combines a fixed monthly retainer — typically THB 8,000–20,000 per month depending on property size — with a lower percentage of gross revenue, often 15–20%. The logic is that the retainer covers fixed operational costs regardless of whether the villa books, and the percentage captures the performance-linked component.
For owners with high-volume properties in peak season, this can work well — the effective percentage is lower when the villa is earning strongly. For properties with significant low-season downtime, the retainer continues regardless of income, which changes the calculation considerably. A villa earning THB 80,000 gross in October paying a THB 15,000 retainer plus 15% is effectively paying 34% of gross that month.
Scrutinise what the retainer actually covers and whether the percentage component is applied before or after OTA commissions are deducted.
3. À-la-carte (services selected individually)
The à-la-carte model lets owners select specific services: channel distribution, dynamic pricing, guest communications, maintenance coordination, or accounting — independently of each other. This suits owners who are already active and want professional support in specific areas rather than full handover.
It works well for owners who live on the island part of the year and handle in-person matters themselves, or for those with a trusted local caretaker who needs professional channel management and pricing layered on top. It breaks down when owners underestimate how interconnected the services are — a booking problem on Booking.com at 11pm requires someone with access to both the channel manager and the guest communication thread, simultaneously.
An apples-to-apples comparison: the same villa, three quotes
To illustrate the gap between headline fee and effective cost, take a 3-bedroom Koh Samui villa earning THB 2,000,000 gross per year with 55 turnovers. Here is how three typical quotes resolve to effective management cost:
VAT notice. Effective May 2026, all Mr Property Siam service fees (management commission, recurring services, setup) are subject to 7% Thai VAT. We are VAT-registered (Tax ID 0845566025288) and issue compliant invoices monthly — recoverable for VAT-registered owners.
| Item | Quote A (12%) | Quote B (18%) | MPS Manager (20%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headline management fee | THB 240,000 | THB 360,000 | THB 400,000 |
| Cleaning coordination charge (add-on) | THB 55,000 | Included | Included |
| Maintenance coordination (per call) | THB 28,000 | Included | Included |
| Monthly owner statements | THB 18,000 | Included | Included |
| 24/7 guest communication coverage | Business hours only | Included | Included |
| Effective total cost | THB 341,000 (17%) | THB 360,000 (18%) | THB 400,000 (20%) |
The 12% quote becomes 17% once add-ons are included — and still delivers only business-hours guest communication coverage, which affects platform response rates and, by extension, search ranking. The 18% mid-market quote and our 20% Manager tier are closer than the headline suggests, and the 2-point gap typically buys faster response coverage, more active revenue management, and tighter maintenance supervision.
The question to ask any management company: "Can you give me a projected total cost statement for my property based on my expected booking volume — not just the headline percentage?" A manager who won't produce this is a manager whose effective rate is higher than their quoted rate.
Our fee structure at Mr Property Siam
We offer three tiers, and we publish them openly. The choice between tiers depends on how much involvement an owner wants to retain versus hand over.
Our full breakdown is on the owner services page, but the core structure is:
- Host — 15% of gross: OTA distribution across all channels, dynamic pricing setup and monitoring, and calendar management. Guest communications and maintenance coordination are handled by the owner or their local representative. Suited for engaged, on-island owners or those with existing operational support.
- Manager — 20% of gross: Everything in Host, plus full guest communications (inquiry to post-checkout), cleaning coordination, maintenance triage, and monthly owner statements. This is our most common tier for international owners who are not based on Samui. Per-reservation turnover services (cleaning, laundry, welcome pack) and recurring operational services (pool, garden, pest, waste, deep cleans) are coordinated by us but billed at supplier cost.
- Ultimate — 25% of gross: Everything in Manager, with the per-reservation turnover bundle absorbed into the commission — turnover cleaning, full-house laundry between stays, and the in-villa welcome pack are no longer billed per booking. Recurring services (deep cleans, pool, garden, pest control, waste) remain billed separately at our most preferential rates, with combo discounts of −5% (2 services) or −10% (3+ services). Plus a dedicated portfolio manager, revenue consulting and custom reporting. Suited for high-occupancy properties where the per-reservation churn is significant.
In Host and Manager tiers, the actual turnover cost (cleaning, laundry, welcome pack — from THB 1,800 for a 2-bedroom to THB 4,500 for a 5-bedroom) is a pass-through line item on your monthly statement. At Ultimate, that per-reservation bundle is absorbed into the 25% commission so it no longer appears as a deduction. In every tier, utilities, capital repairs and recurring operational services (deep cleans, pool, garden, pest, waste) remain pass-through items billed at supplier cost — we don't mark them up, and they're never quietly bundled into the headline rate.
What each fee dollar is actually buying
When owners compare our 20% Manager tier against a competitor's 12% or 15% headline, the answer to where the difference goes is almost always in one of three places:
Response time and channel ranking. Platforms score properties on response rate and speed. A manager who responds within the hour — including at 10pm on a Sunday — maintains the listing ranking that drives organic bookings. A manager who responds the next business day loses ranking points over time, and the bookings that come with them.
Revenue management as an active practice. Dynamic pricing is not something you set up once and leave running. Samui's market shifts — new properties open, events appear or get cancelled, competitor pricing changes, booking windows move. An active manager reviews pricing weekly, not annually. The revenue difference between an actively managed calendar and a set-and-forget configuration adds up to significantly more than the fee difference.
Maintenance costs over time. A manager who coordinates and supervises maintenance properly extends asset life. A manager who passes calls to a contractor and considers the job done leaves owners paying for the same repair twice.
For a full comparison of what our earnings projections look like for your specific property, the villa earnings projection guide is the right starting point — it walks through gross revenue, channel commission, management fee, and operating costs to arrive at a realistic net figure. Our Superhost article covers how platform status directly affects revenue potential: becoming and staying an Airbnb Superhost on Samui. And once you understand the fee structure, the payment flow guide shows exactly how funds move from guest to owner bank account.
A management fee is not a cost — it is a lever. The right structure at the right percentage either pays for itself through revenue improvement and asset protection, or it doesn't. Ask for the numbers before you sign.