05/01/2026
The call comes at 4 a.m. A neighbor noticed water sheeting down the stone facade of your Vail home. By the time anyone gets inside, the supply line that fed the upstairs primary bath has been spraying for nine hours. The hardwood floors are gone. The art on the floor below is gone. The insurance claim will eventually settle, but the place you loved enough to buy will be a construction site for the next eleven months.
Stories like that one aren't rare in Colorado's resort markets. They're the predictable consequence of an asset class that sits empty most of the year, exposed to one of the most punishing climates in the country, monitored by systems designed for a 1990s suburban model of "security."
In Pitkin County, vacancy rates reach 66 percent. In Eagle County, more than a third of homes sit unoccupied year-round. These aren't homes that get a long weekend off. They're homes that go dark for eight to ten months at a stretch, sometimes longer.
The call comes at 4 a.m. A neighbor noticed water sheeting down the stone facade of your Vail home. By the time anyone gets inside, the supply line that fed the