Clifton, VA

  • Overview
  • Performance
  • Listings
  • Buy Box

Key Performance Metrics

Market snapshot

Performance indicators for the Clifton short-term rental market based on reliable data.

Listings

20 / 33

Reliable / Active

Cap Rate

2%

Middle-Earners Gross Yield

Revenue

$22,281

Middle-Earners Revenue

Occupancy

52%

Middle-Earners Occupancy

Home Value

$994,825

Median Home Sale Price

Top Earners

$34,766

Top-Earners Revenue

Clifton

Market Revenue Seasonality

Top Listings

Highest revenue

The highest-performing listings in Clifton.

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C

Challenging to Investors

Clifton Regulations

Short‑term rentals are permitted throughout Fairfax County but face tight restrictions: a hard cap of 60 nights per year, a primary‑resident requirement (≥185 days), and limits of six guests per night, all backed by safety, reporting, and inspection obligations. These caps and compliance burdens substantially reduce profitability and deter many investors.

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About Clifton

Clifton is an incorporated town located in southwestern Fairfax County, Virginia, United States, with a population of 243 at the time of the 2020 census.Incorporated by the General Assembly on March 9, 1902, Clifton is one of only three towns in the county, the other two being the much more populous Vienna and Herndon. Clifton's history begins pre-colonially, when the area was used as hunting grounds by the local Dogue Native American tribe. A railroad siding was constructed here during the Civil War, and the area became titled as Devereux Station. A nearby neighborhood on the outskirts of the Clifton ZIP code has this name. Development of a village at the siding began in 1868 when a railroad depot, named "Clifton Station", was constructed. Unlike most areas in Northern Virginia, the land around Clifton is far less built up than nearby areas, especially to its east and southwest. This was out of the worry that overdevelopment near Bull Run and the Occoquan River would be environmentally damaging to the Occoquan Reservoir. Consequently, as development edged near the area in the late 1970s and early 1980s, an ordinance was enacted stating that only one building could be placed on 5-acre (2.0 ha) parcels that have not already been divided. Today, the southern and eastern portions of the area are heavily forested, with single-family homes, while the northern area has become equestrian areas.

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