This case study covers a buy-side mandate completed by REALIVO GROUP in 2023–2024. Client identity and property name are anonymised. All financial figures are actual.
Client Profile
A UK-based individual investor with a background in private equity and an existing portfolio of two Adriatic vacation rentals. Having observed Montenegro's rapid upmarket repositioning — Aman Sveti Stefan, One&Only Portonovi, and the planned Porto Montenegro expansion attracting ultra-high-net-worth travellers — the investor wanted to acquire an institutional-quality resort asset in the Bay of Kotor before further capital inflows compressed yields.
Mandate: 40–80 key resort hotel or villa complex, operational, Bay of Kotor location preferred, price range €5M–€10M, transaction within 12 months.
The Challenge
Montenegro's hotel transaction market has a structural information problem. There are few professional brokers, fewer published comparable transactions, and a significant trust gap between international buyers and local sellers — many of whom are reluctant to disclose accurate financial records to unknown foreign buyers. The investor had approached two local agents and received no qualified introductions in six months.
Additionally, Montenegro's legal framework for real estate transactions has specific requirements — particularly around foreign ownership of coastal zone properties — that require specialist local legal counsel working alongside an international adviser.
REALIVO's Approach
We engaged our Montenegro network — a combination of local hospitality attorneys, the Montenegro Tourism Organisation contacts, and hotel operators in the region who occasionally flag properties approaching a sale. Within five weeks, we had identified four potential targets.
Market Context We Established for the Client
- Boka Bay was receiving less than 12% of Montenegrin tourism volume but over 40% of premium ADR yield — a structural divergence supporting asset value growth
- The E65 coastal highway upgrade (completion 2025) was projected to reduce Tivat airport to Kotor town travel time from 40 minutes to 18 minutes — a material demand driver for the northern bay
- No institutional hotel transactions had been publicly recorded in the Bay of Kotor in the prior 24 months — a thin market with distorted pricing
Target Selected
A 52-key resort hotel set on a private headland overlooking the bay, built in 2008 and partially refurbished in 2019. The seller was a Montenegrin entrepreneur whose primary business was construction — hotel operations were a distraction, and the property was being managed by an underqualified local management company. Trailing EBITDA was €290,000 — materially below what the asset should have been generating given its location and room count.
Our analysis showed that with professional revenue management, OTA optimisation, and the introduction of a soft brand affiliation, the property could reach €520,000–€580,000 EBITDA within 24 months. This gap between actual and potential earnings was the core investment thesis.
Acquisition Structure
The acquisition involved a Montenegrin DOO (limited liability company) holding the property, with the buyer acquiring 100% of the DOO shares rather than the underlying real estate directly. This structure required:
- Legal audit of the DOO structure, historical accounts, and any legacy liabilities
- Coastal zone compliance verification (Category A coastal property regulations)
- Tourism licence transfer confirmation with the Ministry of Tourism
- Staff employment contracts review (25 full-time, 18 seasonal)
The Transaction
Initial asking price: €8.2M. Our valuation based on trailing EBITDA (€290,000 × 12× multiple = €3.5M on current earnings) anchored our opening position. However, the investment case rested on upside — so we constructed a blended valuation: 50% weight on trailing earnings, 50% on 24-month projected stabilised EBITDA. This supported a range of €5.8M–€6.5M.
After four rounds of negotiation over seven weeks, we agreed at €6.1M, with a seller-financed vendor loan of €600,000 at 5% over 36 months — reducing the buyer's immediate cash requirement and aligning the seller's interest in a smooth transition.
Total timeline: 127 days from mandate to completion.
Results
- Acquisition price: €6.1M (26% below initial ask)
- Acquisition cap rate on trailing EBITDA: 4.8% (depressed — reflected turnaround premium)
- Year 1 RevPAR uplift: +22% following OTA repositioning and dynamic pricing implementation
- Year 1 EBITDA: €410,000 (vs. €290,000 trailing — 41% improvement)
- Stabilised cap rate (Year 2 projected): 8.9% on acquisition cost
- Soft brand affiliation: Secured with a European lifestyle collection brand — increasing ADR by ~14%
Key Takeaways for Emerging Market Hotel Investors
- Operational underperformance is the most reliable source of excess return in thin markets. The asset was not cheap because it was bad — it was cheap because it was badly operated. Buying physical quality at operational multiples is the core emerging market hotel investment thesis.
- Infrastructure catalysts are underpriced when they are specific and datable. The E65 completion date was public knowledge. Its impact on northern bay accessibility was predictable. Most buyers were not running this analysis.
- Vendor financing is underused in Eastern European transactions. Where a seller is motivated but the gap between asking price and rational valuation is large, a vendor loan bridges the gap, reduces buyer cash outlay, and retains seller skin-in-the-game during transition.
- Legal structuring in Montenegro requires specialist counsel. DOO share acquisitions, coastal zone compliance, and tourism licence transfers each carry specific risks that generic real estate lawyers routinely miss. Budget for local specialist legal fees — they are not optional.
FAQ: Hotel Investment in Montenegro
Can foreigners buy hotels in Montenegro?
Yes. Foreign individuals and companies can own hotels in Montenegro, including properties in the coastal zone, subject to applicable regulations. The most common structures are direct property ownership (for inland properties) or DOO (Društvo s ograničenom odgovornošću) share acquisition for existing operating companies. Some coastal zone Category A properties have additional restrictions on new construction but existing licensed hotels are generally transferable. Always use local Montenegrin legal counsel for any acquisition.
What is the investment case for Montenegro hotels in 2025?
Montenegro is in the middle of a decade-long upmarket repositioning. Tourism arrivals reached 2.4M in 2024, a record high. HNWI travel to the Bay of Kotor specifically has grown at 18% CAGR since 2019. Infrastructure investment — roads, Tivat marina expansion, Porto Montenegro Phase 2 — is ongoing. For institutional investors, Montenegro offers 2022-vintage Croatian pricing with 2018-vintage Croatian opportunity for value creation. Window is closing as international capital discovers the market.
What RevPAR can a well-positioned Bay of Kotor resort achieve?
In 2024, well-operated 4-star resort hotels in the Bay of Kotor achieved ADR of €180–€240 in peak season (July–August) and €90–€140 in shoulder season (May–June, September). Annual occupancy for professionally managed properties averaged 62–70%. This produces a stabilised RevPAR of €120–€165, generating EBITDA margins of 28–38% for assets without significant F&B dependency.
How does Montenegro hotel investment compare to Croatia?
Montenegro currently offers 150–200 basis points higher cap rates than comparable Croatian Adriatic assets, reflecting market immaturity and lower transaction liquidity. Croatia's EU membership (2013) has driven institutional capital and yield compression. Montenegro's EU accession process (target mid-2020s) represents the same potential yield compression catalyst. Investors who entered Croatia in 2017–2019 saw 35–50% capital appreciation by 2024 as the market matured.