CoChalet is deeded co-ownership of one specific luxury chalet.
You own a real, titled percentage of a single named property — real estate you hold, registered in your name. Not shares in a company. Not a stake in a fund.
Take a $1.3M-class chalet in the Tremblant corridor. Three families each own 10% — deeded, on title. CoChalet holds the remaining majority and runs the property end to end. Your 10% is roughly $130K, and it comes with about 37 nights a year plus full hotel-style service managed through the CoChalet app.
Figures illustrative — actual per-property numbers are specific to each chalet.
Families who love chalet life but not chalet ownership — the upkeep, the liability, the "the happiest day is the day you sell it." They want the use, the comfort, and the feeling of their own place — without running it.
You own titled real estate at a fraction of a whole-chalet cost, with none of the operating burden — and the property is held to one consistent five-star standard. Ownership without the headache; hospitality without the hotel.
A deeded percentage of one specific chalet — real, titled real estate registered in your name. Not shares, not a fund, not a points system.
Ten percent works out to roughly 37 nights a year — more than most families realistically use. It keeps each owner's cost low while keeping the chalet genuinely, comfortably usable.
Yes — co-owners can acquire additional equity beyond the base 10%.
CoChalet holds the remaining majority stake and operates the property — bookings, hospitality, maintenance, the standard. Co-owners hold their deeded slices; CoChalet runs the whole.
Families who want chalet use without chalet-ownership burden — not investors shopping for a yield product.
CoChalet buys properties outright — a few strategic, already-proven chalets in the Tremblant corridor. No owner-partnerships: CoChalet controls quality end to end.
Existing, proven inventory — chalets with real short-term-rental track records — then upgraded for durability and a consistent five-star standard.
Yes — fully. The first co-owner gets their complete ~37-night entitlement from day one. CoChalet carries the unsold inventory until the remaining slots fill, so your use never waits on anyone else's timing.
Both are co-ownership of a real home — but the structures differ in ways that matter.
| CoChalet | Pacaso | |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership form | Deeded co-ownership (indivision) under Quebec's Civil Code — you own titled real estate | LLC-share model — each home sits in its own LLC; you own a membership interest in that LLC |
| What's on title | Your name, on the property — a deeded percentage | The LLC holds title; you hold an interest in the LLC |
| Share size | 10% base · co-owners may acquire additional equity | 1/8 to 1/2 · maximum 8 owners per home |
| Annual use | ~37 nights/yr at the 10% tier (illustrative) | Up to 44 nights/yr per 1/8 share · max 14 consecutive nights |
| Operator & stake | CoChalet retains a majority stake and operates the property to one five-star standard | Pacaso fully manages the home · retains no ownership once it is fully sold |
| Resale | Facilitated resale of the deeded interest | Transfer of the LLC membership interest · one-year minimum hold |
| Market | Tremblant corridor, Quebec | US-founded · international markets |
Pacaso column verified against public sources (pacaso.com, May 2026). CoChalet "resale" row reflects the facilitated-resale framing, counsel-pending.