About

The mid-term rental market runs on guesswork. Augrin changes that.

What We Build

Augrin aggregates public market data — building permits, fair market rents, demographic shifts, healthcare workforce concentration — with proprietary transaction signals from the mid-term rental market to produce pricing intelligence that doesn't exist anywhere else.

The output is not a dashboard. It's a conclusion: what the market is doing, what it means for your pricing, and whether you should act.

Why Mid-Term Rentals

The mid-term rental segment — stays of 30 to 180 days — sits between short-term vacation rentals and long-term leases. It serves travel nurses, remote workers, insurance relocations, and corporate housing. AirDNA covers short-term. CoStar covers commercial. Neither covers the mid-term segment with the depth that operators need.

Augrin does.

Who It's For

  • Property managers and operators making pricing decisions across multiple markets.
  • Real estate investors evaluating mid-term rental market entry and acquisition targets.
  • Platforms and marketplaces that need a data layer for the MTR segment. Tessora is the first.

How the Data Works

Augrin ingests publicly available datasets from U.S. government agencies on a recurring schedule:

  • Census Bureau — Building Permits Survey (monthly), American Community Survey (annual)
  • HUD — Fair Market Rents (annual, used as pricing baseline)
  • BLS — Healthcare workforce employment, job openings, and economic indicators (monthly)
  • CMS — Hospital Compare quality and financial data (weekly)
  • FEMA — Disaster declarations and displacement events (daily)
  • Zillow Research — Observed Rent Index (ZORI). Data Provided by Zillow Group
  • RentCast — Rental market data via commercial API license
  • OpenStreetMap — Hospital proximity mapping. Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors

This public data is combined with proprietary transaction signals from the Tessora marketplace — listing volumes, booking rates, and pricing clearance data — to produce market metrics, pricing recommendations, and supply/demand signals delivered via API.

Government data sources are public domain and attributed per each agency's requirements. This product uses the HUD User Data API but is not endorsed or certified by HUD User.

Interested in a data partnership?

Get in touch