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Best Silverthorne Agent, Colorado | Verified, One Introduction

Silverthorne's $580K–$1.1M market generates $50K–$90K in gross STR income annually at a $30K–$80K discount to Frisco, but commercial adjacency and STR license caps require specialist navigation. Own Luxury Homes® matches buyers to verified Silverthorne specialists with documented Summit County closing history.

Request a Verified Specialist Introduction

Tell us your market, property type, price range, and whether you are buying or selling. We identify the specialist whose documented closing history matches your specific transaction and make one direct introduction. If no specialist in our network qualifies for your exact market and situation, we tell you directly — we never introduce someone who falls short of the standard.

HomeMarketsColorado › Silverthorne

The specialist we verify for Silverthorne has documented closing history in this exact submarket. They've been here, done it, and passed our audit. That's the standard before your name goes anywhere.

Market Intelligence

Silverthorne's $580K–$1.1M market offers Summit County resort proximity at a consistent $30K–$80K discount to Frisco, driven by its commercial-corridor adjacency and slightly different STR licensing density. Gross seasonal rental income runs $50K–$90K annually on STR-eligible properties, making yield-per-dollar one of the strongest arguments for Silverthorne relative to its neighbors. Summit County's mill levy of approximately 50 mills produces annual property taxes of $6,200–$11,800 on this price range, a carrying cost that compounds when STR licensing fees are layered in. Buyers relocating from Denver's Front Range frequently target Silverthorne as their first mountain-market entry point, attracted by the outlet-corridor convenience and Blue River access.

What You Need to Know

Tax Mechanics. Summit County's approximately 50-mill levy produces property taxes of roughly $6,200 on a $580K Silverthorne purchase and $11,800 on a $1.1M property, using Colorado's 6.765% residential assessment ratio. STR operators in Silverthorne face the same Summit County licensing and registration fees as Frisco, adding $500–$2,000 annually depending on permit tier. The commercial corridor that gives Silverthorne its slight price discount also means some residential zones border commercial-use parcels, which can affect assessed value methodology at reassessment. Buyers planning STR investment should confirm the specific levy district and applicable fees before underwriting.

Structural Friction. Silverthorne's commercial adjacency creates a comp-scarcity problem — properties backing to retail or outlet corridors require careful CMA methodology to avoid inflating value against purely residential comps. Summit County STR cap constraints apply equally to Silverthorne, meaning license availability must be verified property-by-property, not assumed from general zoning. The Blue River corridor properties command a view premium that is not consistently reflected in automated valuations, creating both opportunity and risk depending on the agent's comp discipline. Workforce demand from resort-sector employees also competes with investor-buyers in the $580K–$750K tier, creating unpredictable multiple-offer dynamics.

Timing. Q4 ski-season demand drives the primary buyer surge as investors underwrite against December–March STR booking revenue. Q2 summer recreation demand creates a secondary wave tied to Blue River fishing and mountain biking season. The March–April shoulder between ski and summer is historically the lowest competition window in Silverthorne. Sellers listing in late September capture buyers motivated to close before Q4 booking calendars fill.

Competitive Context. Frisco trades $30K–$80K above Silverthorne on comparable product, primarily on walkability and perceived STR eligibility density. Dillon, adjacent to the reservoir, carries a view premium for reservoir-facing units that can push pricing above Silverthorne's typical range. Breckenridge commands $100K–$200K more than Silverthorne on comparable square footage, pricing out many yield-focused buyers. For the buyer optimizing yield-per-dollar within Summit County, Silverthorne consistently represents the strongest entry point.

The Bottom Line

Silverthorne's yield-per-dollar advantage over Frisco and Breckenridge is real, but capturing it requires a specialist who can navigate commercial adjacency comps, STR license availability, and Blue River view premiums simultaneously. Off-market activity in Silverthorne runs 15–25% of transactions including pre-market and pocket listings, particularly in the workforce-buyer and entry-investor tiers.

Related market context includes Silverthorne Market Guide, Frisco Market Guide, and Dillon Market Guide.



Begin through verified specialist matching with documented closing history in this submarket. Also see the 5% Performance Audit™, verified credentials, and off-market listings in this submarket.



Finding the right Silverthorne agent requires verifying Summit County workforce demand and STR rental yield vs. Frisco closing history at $580K-$1.1M — not county-wide, in Silverthorne specifically. Verified through the 5% Performance Audit™ — documented closing history within Silverthorne's submarket boundary in the trailing 12 months. One direct introduction. No competing names.

Your verified Silverthorne specialist:

  • ✓ Verified $15M+ annual volume
  • ✓ 80% concentration in declared property type
  • ✓ Days on market 50% below local avg
  • ✓ ZIP-level closing history confirmed
  • ✓ 12-Point Integrity Audit passed


Frequently Asked Questions

What STR rental income is realistic in Silverthorne?

STR-eligible properties in Silverthorne with confirmed Summit County licensing generate gross seasonal rental income of approximately $50K–$90K annually depending on bedroom count and proximity to resort access. Net yield after HOA, taxes, and management typically runs 55–70% of gross. Actual performance data from comparable closed units is the most reliable underwriting input — a specialist with documented Silverthorne STR closings can provide this.

How does Silverthorne compare to Frisco for investment buyers?

Silverthorne typically prices $30K–$80K below Frisco on comparable square footage, producing a higher yield-per-dollar for STR investors who can verify license eligibility. The trade-off is Frisco's stronger pedestrian walkability and slightly higher occupancy rates in some building categories. Buyers focused on net ROI rather than lifestyle use often favor Silverthorne's entry point.

Does the commercial corridor affect resale value in Silverthorne?

Properties directly adjacent to Silverthorne's outlet and retail corridor require careful comparable analysis — they can be harder to sell to lifestyle buyers but appeal strongly to investors focused on access and convenience. The Blue River corridor on the opposite end of the market carries a genuine view premium. A specialist with Silverthorne-specific closing history will separate these micro-location factors in pricing.

Related Market Intelligence



Your Silverthorne specialist has already passed. $15M+ volume, documented submarket closings, and the local track record verified. The research ends here — the introduction is one step away.

Request a Verified Specialist Introduction

Tell us your market, property type, price range, and whether you are buying or selling. We identify the specialist whose documented closing history matches your specific transaction and make one direct introduction. If no specialist in our network qualifies for your exact market and situation, we tell you directly — we never introduce someone who falls short of the standard.

"The introduction Own Luxury Homes® makes is to a specialist with documented closing history in your specific market — not the county, not the metro, the submarket you're actually selling or buying in. That's the standard we verify before your name goes anywhere."

— Ryan Brown, Principal Broker & CEO, Own Luxury Homes® (FL License BK3626873)

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