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For nearly a decade,
VOC homes
couldn't legally be rented short-term.
The Village of Oakcreek Association — which governs roughly 2,340 homes across 25 subdivisions — announced at its April meeting that its decade-old short-term rental ban is unenforceable. What that means: most VOC homeowners can now legally operate their property as a vacation rental. Properties that have been sitting empty, on the market without an offer, or quietly costing money each month suddenly have a new option — one that can generate $80,000 to $130,000 per year in revenue depending on the home. Most VOC owners haven't heard yet. The window to act before competition forms is shorter than it sounds.
Three of the homes we currently tend.
Each one positioned individually.
We tend each property individually and earn 40–50% more in net revenue than volume operators — because we don't compete on price.
We work with
a small number of
VOC owners.
In Every
Casa Amiga Home
Every detail in a Casa Amiga home is chosen to serve a specific kind of guest: the one who plans the hike before booking the flight, who reads ingredient labels, who pays more for a stay that matches who they are.
compete on price.
We do the opposite. Every Casa Amiga property is positioned for a specific kind of guest — the health-conscious adventure traveler who pays more, books 4 to 7 night stays, and treats your home the way they treat their own.
What Brings Guests
to the Corridor
Northern Arizona's 89A corridor draws a specific kind of traveler — one who comes for movement, presence, and considered time outdoors. We position each property to attract them.














