
Zeus Living closes on $55M to offer flexible, furnished rentals as it expands beyond corporate housing
During the pandemic and shift to remote work that came with it, many people took advantage of their newfound flexibility to try living in different places.
One startup poised to benefit from this is Zeus Living, which is focused on giving people âflexible livingâ options and has just raised $55 million in a round led by SIG.
Initialized Capital, CEAS Investments, TI Platform, NFX, Opendoorâs Eric Wu and Miras also participated in the financing, which brings the startupâs total raised to $125 million. The company declined to reveal its current valuation, but it was valued at $205 million at the time of its last raise in 2019.
Zeus Living started its life by redecorating landlordsâ homes and renting the furnished properties primarily to relocated workers for 30-day stays (or longer) for a new type of corporate housing. Since then, it has broadened its focus and evolved into a company that gives people â not just corporate employees â more options to generally move around with less commitment.
âSince our start, we provided âhomeâ to people traveling for work, but also for grandparents spending extended time with newborn grandbabies, people seeking healthcare and families renovating their homes,â said CEO and co-founder Kulveer Taggar. âOver the past 18 months weâve superseded corporate housing and are challenging the old, rigid rental market by offering beautifully designed homes outfitted at fair prices and flexible terms in places residents want to live.â
Itâs a cool comeback story, considering that at the onset of the pandemic, Zeus Living made headlines for laying off about 80 people, or about 30% of the company. And the demand is there.
As evidence of the pandemic and the resulting remote work shift, Zeus Living says it saw a â6x increaseâ in residents booking leases with no predetermined end date, for an average stay of 129 nights, over the last year.
Fundamentally, Taggar believes âthere is a new American dreamâ that doesnât involve buying a house as being a symbol of someone âmaking it.â
âWhat we see now for this new generation, that goal or dream, doesnât relate as much to buying a house,â he told TechCrunch. âThey want to invest in experiences over possessions. They want to be more mobile. And they just want to do that without tons of headache and hassle.â
In 2019, Zeus Living offered 2,400 homes on its site, partnering with homeowners to manage their properties and rent them out. Today, that has grown to nearly 5,000 homes in 96 U.S. cities such as Austin, Miami, Portland and Philadelphia. Occupancy is 87%, compared to 82% in 2020, while ârevparâ (the revenue it achieves for the homeowners whose properties it manages) has increased 21% this year compared to last.
Over time, residents have spent over 1.4 million nights with Zeus, and 811,562 of those were during the pandemic. The company is approaching $250 million in lifetime booking revenue.
Since those March 2020 layoffs, the company has been able to hire back some of the people it was forced to lay off, according to Taggar. But itâs still operating somewhat lean comparatively speaking, with 122 employees.
The company emphasizes that unlike its investor Airbnb, it is not a marketplace and manages its homes â from curation to design to property management and service. Plus, its homes are priced for 30+ day stays and not nightly. Airbnb is a channel for Zeus, though.
With Zeus, Taggar said, users can browse the thousands of homes that it manages and pick the dates they want to stay there â whether it be five weeks or five months, all from their phone. Residents also donât have to set up utilities or Wi-Fi. Zeus will take care of that, too.
âYou can be flexible and leave with just two weeksâ notice,â he said. âAnd you can then trust that the experience is going to be good because Zeus has put in the hard work of curating the home in the first place. Weâve inspected it, and we know itâs safe, and then we will design it to make it comfortable for you to live in.â

Image Credits: Zeus Living
While Zeus was growing revenue 3-4x a year since it started in 2015, it hit a temporary speed bump when the pandemic started, according to Taggar.
âBut weâre getting back on that path,â he said.â Weâre making the rental experience very modern and turnkey. Even if the operations behind the scenes to make that all work are quite involved and complicated.â
Looking ahead, the company plans to use its new capital to focus on growth and expansion.
âWeâre supply constrained in all of our markets, so we want to go and get more homes,â Taggar told TechCrunch. âWe also want to keep investing in, and improving, the online experience for our homeowners and residents.â
In fact, he said, Zeus Living has had $40 million in unmet demand over the past 12 months.
âWe know where people want to live and how much theyâre willing to pay for flexible living,â he said.
Garry Tan, founder and managing partner of Initialized Capital, is a repeat investor in Zeus Living, having led its seed and Series A rounds and invested in its Series B and C financings.
Overall, Tan believes the world of property management is âstuck in the same place taxi companies were before ride-hailing.â
Zeus Living, he believes, has created something that is a bit of âset and forgetâ for property owners. At the same time, itâs helping meet a need for people seeing flexible living options in âthe absolute best markets.â
âWeâre going into this new phase where people donât have to be in a handful of cities,â he told TechCrunch. âYou can be anywhere in the country. And this new idea of FlexLiving is that it makes that possibility more accessible to everyone.â
What makes Zeus even more special, in Tanâs view, is its ability to find properties in desirable areas of town that usually only the people who live in a city know about, so the residents can âlive like a local.â
âItâs actually much harder to get those locations, so itâs also much more profitable, because itâs also where customers want to be,â Tan said.
Of course, Zeus Living is not the only player in the flexible rental space. The Guild, an Austin, Texas-based startup that turns apartments into comfortable short-term accommodations for business and other travelers, last raised a $25 million Series B in January of 2020. Last June, hospitality startup Sonder raised $170 million at a $1.3 billion valuation although itâs important to note that the company â which rents serviced apartments akin to boutique hotels â might be more of a competitor to Airbnb.
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