The management fee percentage is the number every property owner asks about first. It's also the number that matters least. What matters is what that percentage covers — and what you're still on the hook for.

The Two Main Structures

Before you can evaluate a management fee, you need to understand which structure you're being offered:

Structure 1: Management Fee Agreement

The property owner keeps all parking revenue. The management company charges a fee — typically 8–15% of gross revenue — to operate the lot. The property owner typically covers major expenses (equipment, insurance, capital improvements).

Structure 2: Revenue-Share (Lease) Agreement

The management company takes over the lot and pays the property owner a fixed amount or percentage of revenue. The operator keeps the rest and covers all operating expenses. The property owner gets less upside but zero operational involvement.

FactorManagement FeeRevenue Share
Who keeps revenueProperty ownerOperator
Who covers expensesShared (varies)Operator
Owner involvementHigherMinimal
Owner upsideHigherCapped
Owner riskHigherLower

Management Fee Benchmarks by Lot Size

Monthly Gross RevenueTypical Fee RangeNotes
Under $5,000/mo15–20%Small lots, higher overhead ratio
$5,000–$20,000/mo12–15%Mid-size lots, most Texas properties
$20,000–$100,000/mo8–12%High-volume, urban locations
Above $100,000/mo5–8%Large garages, negotiated rates

What the Fee Should Cover

A management fee should cover:

A management fee typically does not cover:

Red Flags in Fee Structures

TPMA Recommendation: Ask every vendor for a sample P&L from a comparable property. If they won't provide one, that's your answer.