The market is anchored by Omaha, which spikes hard every June for the College World Series, and Lincoln on the Husker calendar, with the Sandhills, the Platte River crane-migration corridor, and Lake McConaughy carrying the seasonal trade. Price points are modest and occupancy is event-driven.
Hail alleyNebraska sits in the heart of hail alley, and the underwriting reflects it: wind-hail deductibles, roof age schedules, and cosmetic-damage exclusions decide most property outcomes. Tornado exposure, deep-freeze winters, and basement water losses complete a classic Plains loss picture.
Nebraska claims most often fail on the roof: percentage deductibles never converted to dollars, actual-cash-value roof schedules on older shingles, and cosmetic exclusions after hail. Confirm your wind-hail deductible in dollars, how your roof is valued, and your sewer-backup coverage before storm season.
Nebraska statute requires municipalities to treat short-term rentals the same as similar residential property, which bars outright bans and keeps regulation general. Omaha and Lincoln apply standard rental registration and zoning rather than STR-specific regimes, and the state hotel occupation tax plus local lodging taxes apply through the platforms. It is one of the lighter regulatory environments in the country. Confirm the city’s general rental rules and the event-week occupancy limits before you buy.