Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (2024)

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Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (1)Annnnnnnnnd we’re back! Hi!

The home sharing online revolutionary Airbnb has transformed our lives. Theentire Airbnb sham-bang has been a wild ride. I’ll continue with the things that should be addressed, but that’s not in-depth enough to deserve its own post.

If this is content useful,click my linkto BECOME A HOST and start your side hustle today!

Table of Contents

Hosting on Airbnb

~ This is an installment of my Airbnb series. Check out part oneor browse all my Airbnb content ~

Tips ON Writing A Good Airbnb Listing

The best tip for filling out your Airbnb profile is, to be honest and transparent about everything. The photos should be taken in good lighting and if you do not have a professional DSLR camera, a regular smart phone camera will do just fine. None of my photos are professionally taken so I don’t think it’s a deal breaker. There are editing apps (LINE camera was what I used) that can brighten up the photos.

There should be around 400-500 words to describe your Airbnb in the description boxes. This does not include the house rule or the house manual. I have about 400-something words for my house rules and my house manuals each. I have more rules and restrictions than your typical host so you don’t have to stretch it to 400+ words. It just makes me more comfortable when I’m thorough with my home. In a way, if it’s too long, guests won’t read it. But any less you should add in more detail to show that you are a serious and responsible host. Any more than 800 words I don’t think guests will be too keen on reading it while they’re traveling on the road.

The most important thing is just to disclose everything. It really pays to be transparent. You want to garner better reviews. Better reviews generally lead to more bookings.

  • Use line breaks on your profile so it’s easier to read
  • Use bullets and numbers so it’s easy to skim
  • List the entire content of the room & amenities (because guests will ask about work desks or if they have to bring their own towels etc.)
  • Nothing personal (age, marital status etc) that will not impact the actual stay. Guests want to know about the room. Hosts have their own profile to fill out so only do it there.
  • Fill out both the house manual and house rules because guests tend to read just one.
  • Address all house quirks and pet peeves. If the fridge door requires two hands to open or there’s a backup key for the front door, address it under “things to note.”

I don’t live near _____, should I still try out Airbnb?

The lovely Danielle asked this question. I do get this one a lot from people (even my own guests too.)

Everyone’s location is different and travel trends change all the time but I’m still going to give a conclusive, YES you can! Most people overlook the other possibilities of Airbnb. It’s not just a rest stop for guests. It can be a solitude mountain cabin or old country getaway.

It’s important to have a niche. You are competing with Travelodge and Midwestern that are, well, they’re boring. They are rest stops. You want to offer an experience. If you want to have fun with Airbnb then you should have a niche and a theme. Don’t underestimate how adventurous Airbnb guests can be. My Airbnb is very tamed but if I could to do it all over again, I would have shot for more interesting decor. Maybe old Hollywood glam? 🙂

If you think your location isn’t good enough just because it’s not in the center of the action – nope! It just means less competition and higher potential profit to mortgage ratio. We are at the edge of Seattle so when I started Airbnb I thought I was going to be lucky if I had 50% occupancy. I can snooze the year away and still set myself on a 90% occupancy.

It’s good to be near a busy roadway. You have to remember:cars are still a huge player in the way people travel. Often we would get travelers who fly in and rent a car then drive up north on I-5 to Vancouver and then back down to Seattle again, so they stay with us twice!

There’s also the occasional guests who are staying with us because they have family nearby without a room for them to crash. We also get guests who are attending weddings nearby too. People are always moving around and there’s always something going on.

What Should a New Airbnb Host Expect?

When we first opened our Airbnb I had no idea what to expect. I didn’t have any family or friends who were hosting. I checked out the other listings in Seattle and checked out some super hosts nearby for examples on what to write (you should do this too). Expect some trial and error for the first 6 months, at least.

When I started, I forgot to give instructions for our heating system and guests complained thinking there was no heat. Ugh, that was so dumb.You never stop learning really. There are always new situations that come up. We had a guest who needed emergency check-in because they had their car broken into on the drive up to Seattle. We had to help check their luggage and clothes for broken shards of glass before we could put it into the washing machine.

Another embarrassing thing was….so I’m a girl, and it has never occurred to me to clean the underside of the toilet seat. I mean, why would I? I’m a chick. I forgot the toilet seat even goes up.So it was really gross under the seat (vomit, urine…mystery stuff…) from months of neglect before a guest finally came up and informed me about it.I make my poor husband do the toilets now, I am a bad toilet person.

Can you have pets and still be a host?

Yes! But it might lessen your range because some guests are allergic to fur (more cats than dogs from my experience). Although most of the time it’s not a deal breaker. I believe finding a pet free Airbnb is quite difficult up here. Seattleites love dogs and cats. We still have bookings from guests who are semi-allergic to dogs. They take a Benadryl and deal with it. Different strokes for different folks!

Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (3)

Private pupper security 1st class…refusing to let go of hubby’s winter sock.

But a bouncy pounce-y dog is probably a no-no for guests. Grace our dog is not the “OH HOOMAN I LOVE YOU” type. She has been abused as a pup before we rescued her so she is afraid of humans. Grace is a natural guard dog. If an ax murderer came into the house, Grace can hear and sound the alarm the moment they cross the proverbial comfort zone. She has amazing hearing (look at ’em ears!) and she hears when a guest nears our driveway long before we do. She’s just too chicken to actually go up to them. She hides at the top of the stairs and observes from afar. She will bark once and then run away. It’s hilarious.

I tell all of my guests that Grace is the breed that sheds a lot. Sometimes her fur gets into the laundry and sticks onto the fresh linens, most guests understand. Be transparent about all the pets you have. It doesn’t matter if it’s a hamster or a turtle you should let your guests know! Disclaimer everything!

What is the difference between a shared home and an entire rental?

The biggest difference is going to be taxed. Otherwise renting out an entire home is like renting out a single room but with less supervision. Guests expect a higher standard of cleanliness for an entire rental.

In a shared home, guests are pretty understanding that there will be normal clutter. I have a roll of tape on the table too fat to fit into our utility drawer. There are Chinese candy wrappers out too that I want to save since I don’t know the candy and I want to keep a copy to find it again. We have two weeks worth of recycling that needs to go out (ordering too much stuff from Amazon…again!)

Airbnb guests in our shared residence have never deducted points on clutter. Never ever at all. Surprises me every time, ha! Our guest rooms are always pristine but if someone’s living room was as cluttered as mine, I would probably think to take off points… I would be like “uh, lady, the rooms are awesome but there are more candy wrappers here than a preschool.

Our vacation rental has little to no clutter. My theme was minimalism (you can guess why $$). I clean up pretty thoroughly but the guest who rent an entire rental are pickier. You will hear complaints about regular dust on the TV and drinking glasses being mismatched.

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What are the biggest seasonal differences on Airbnb?

Summertime is amazing if you want to see the money flow in. I don’t have to answer any half-assed inquires or worry about last-minute cancellations. I don’t have to worry about occupancy – there’s always somebody looking in July. But from my experience, winter guests are a lot more easy-going. They’re just very casual about everything and it’s more fun as a host when guests put their trust in you to do your thing. Maybe it’s the weather, who knows. Winter guests take instructions better for the most part.

I have a monthly rating scale from 1 to 5 with 1 being the slowest and5 being the busiest:

January: 2
February: 2.5
March: 5
April: 6
May: 8
June: 10
July: 10
August: 10
September: 5
October: 2
November: 1.5
December: 3

Summertime guests tend to be more impatient. After guests confirm a booking, I reach out and tell each guest that I will be sending out the check-in information in the early mornings on the date of their arrival (unless they specifically answer me otherwise.) No one says boo about otherwise!!!But for some reason, summertime guests will message me 2-3 days before in a panic wondering how they’re going to check in when they can check in and if they need to buy towels or detergent etc. Reading and traveling is not a popular pairing.

Why not just do a traditional long-term rental?

To me, a house can become an asset when the rent can cover the mortgage. Our first house (because we killed off 60% of it in a year) can return a profit as a long-term rental. Airbnb for our entire rental breaks even still after the mortgage and the utilities. There’s also a rental glut in Seattle so we’re trying to bypass that by offering short-term solutions instead.

A traditional rental will bring in less than an Airbnb but it is an idea I’ve entertained.Renting out our entire rental long-term will bring in $500-$800 less a month. According to our excel sheet, a traditional rental will break even only after 12 years at this current rate (assuming 98% occupancy). There was some data we found that stated most landlords do not break even with their mortgageuntil about 15 years in with a traditional rental.

If someday, we ever decide to breed or travel ourselves, then yes, definitely!

Are you An Airbnb co-host?

Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (4)Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (5)Airbnb recently launched a co-host programin some cities (like Seattle) for people who want to be a host but don’t have the time for it. I signed up to be a co-host but I haven’t had any bites yet (not that I was expecting any, it’s quite new.) Airbnb lets you set a certain # mile radius where you’re available to co-host. You will also have to decide on what percentage of the total reservation and/or any cleaning fees you want to take. The percentage is a minimum of 10% to a maximum of 20% of the total reservation cost. You can also set a fixed fee for each Airbnb listing that you prepare.

How is Airbnb’s support line?

Being a superhost means the call representatives are much more likely to take your side on an issue compared to a guest with less to no credibility. You hold some trust and value in their eyes so they treat you better than a regular host. The wait time is supposedly shorter for a superhost but I have not found that to be true at all. I think someone said, “they don’t talk to superhosts like a dead-eyed idiot. They talk to superhosts like a living dead-eyed idiot!”

Hahaha 🙂 all kidding aside, I actually really like Airbnb’s support. Although the on-hold time has gotten longer, the service is always top-notch. Great phone manners, no one transfers me and I never had to escalate pass a phone call. Airbnb’s phone service is much more responsive than what I’ve experienced with Comcast or AT&T.

Have your proof of identity ready; know your email address on the account and know the last 4 digits of your bank account on the account as well.

After every call, they will send you a customized email with follow-up instructions and/or a complete summary of the resolution. Great touch!

How do you coordinate with guests?

There was once 4 options to message your guests but now after the latest Airbnb update, there is only 3. They took away the texting/SMS option which was my second favorite. The 3 options now are direct messages via Airbnb, e-mail, and calling. Calling each guest is beyond awkward, I’ve only done it in emergencies. I have no idea who they are or what they’re doing. Roughly 15% of my guests don’t speak very good English either. Airbnb messenger is the best way to communicate – it’s a good record keeper if you do open up a case.

The official check-in message should be no more than 300 words. I would pick out the most important house rules and bring it up again before I hand over the door code and WiFi information. Leave the important things near the top of the message but leave necessary things (door code and WiFi passwords) in the middle or towards the end of the message. Template all common messages to save time.End all templates with a polite thank you followed by your name, phone number, and e-mail.

Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (6)

How long do you spend managing your properties, tenants, screening, etc.?

Mr. SMM asked this question and it’s definitely less than when I firststarted. Airbnb has continued to update their mobile app and they added features like easy-view calendars and templates. You can also take and send photos directly from the app itself now. For a slowpoke like me, it’s about 1-2 hours to clean a dirty room (including laundry time) and 20 minutes a day of socializing and answering guest inquiries on my phone.

Security & Safety Tips

  • Not many gusts (and hosts too) know this but a host is not allowed to send their address inside the Airbnb messenger. Airbnb will auto-censor sensitive information if it’s detected to protect you.All confirmed guests will have your address automatically loaded onto their itinerary (in the ‘reservations’tab) the moment the booking is confirmed.Do not give out your home address to any guest who has not confirmed booking!
  • Buy an electronic door lock with a keypad to simplify the check-in process if you don’t want to always greet guests. I do not meet or greet 90%+ of my incoming guests. The electronic lock must have an auto-lock function – don’t count on guests to remember to lock up! Have a back up manual combination lock box to store the physical key for when the electronic keypad batteries dies.
  • Stock a full first-aid kit in each bathroomand a sewing kit too. Inform all guests where the fire extinguishers are in case of fire emergencies. We have a closet with ourearthquake kit that includes a hand-cranked radio, flashlight, dehydrated rations, water, purification tablets etc. If our guests are stuck with us during a bad earthquake I want to be able to cover everyone’s safety (because, man, think of how the bad the reviews would be if we didn’t! ?)

Snacks

  • Provide breakfast (we have muffins) and some basic form of cereal. Do not provide milk. It will just go bad.
  • Make sure in the house rules you address that there will be no special dietary restrictions in the snacks. There are guests who ask if we have gluten-free, sugar-less, free-range kale whatever. If I have a pet peeve, it’s this one. We’re not a restaurant. Thereare 100 guests before and 100 guests after who doesn’t have any dietary restrictions.
  • Always buy in bulk (wholesale clubs & using Amazon’s camelcamelcamel tracking with S&S.)

If this is content useful,click my linkto BECOME A HOST and start your side hustle today!

For Airbnb guest users, if you found this useful,click my referral link, to get free $40 in Airbnb travel credit on your first booking.

Wow, still here?!?!?! I think I’m done with the mock Q&A now 🙂 questions? Hosting on Airbnb can be a very profitable path if a host does it right. Remember you can’t please every guest hosting on Airbnb. An 80% positive feedback score is more than suffice for a good host. Keep price in line with value and seasonality as well. We will discuss more of this in the next post. Stay tuned.

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Hosting on Airbnb Q&A Part 2 - From Pets to Scrubbing Toilets | The Frugal Gene (2024)

FAQs

How does Airbnb punish hosts? ›

Depending on the nature of the violation, Airbnb may also take other actions, such as canceling an upcoming or active reservation, refunding a guest from a Host's payout, and/or requiring Hosts to provide proof that they have addressed issues before they can resume hosting.

Did Airbnb remove the pet filter? ›

Airbnb users can now filter for listings with king-sized beds in case they want extra room while they sleep. The platform has also brought back a pet-friendly homes filter, so travelers can more easily see which listings will accommodate four-legged guests. The company previously retired the filter in 2021.

Should you allow pets in your Airbnb? ›

Allowing pets in your Airbnb can make your listing stand out, attract a larger pool of travelers, and increase your revenue — or it could be a doggone bad decision. If you decide to make your vacation rental pet-friendly, one of the best things you can do is prepare.

Can Airbnb deny ESA dogs? ›

We recognize that service animals are not pets, and that they serve a critical function for their owners. A Host is required to accept service animals (even if they don't allow pets), except in limited health and safety circ*mstances. Learn more about finding places with accessibility features as well.

What are Airbnb hosts not allowed to do? ›

Physical intrusions: Hosts and guests must not access or attempt to access private spaces unless they have permission or there is an emergency. In entire-home stays, this applies to the listing itself and its property.

Should an Airbnb host provide toilet paper? ›

But all guests want the basic items that they'll need to have a comfortable stay. We strongly encourage Hosts to provide these essential amenities in all their listings: Toilet paper.

How do I clean my Airbnb after my dog? ›

The use of a vacuum cleaner, a practical solution

However, there are effective solutions to keep a clean interior and make your Airbnb accommodation or other type of vacation accommodation clean and it can be. You can clean your rental using a vacuum cleaner for pet hair for example.

What happens if you take pets to Airbnb? ›

You may have to pay an additional fee.

For example, most hosts add a cleaning charge for flipping the property between guests, including washing and changing sheets, cleaning, sanitization, and trash removal. However, if you bring a pet, many Airbnb owners impose an additional fee on top of the regular cleaning costs.

What is the Airbnb pet policy? ›

To make it even easier for Hosts to welcome pets, you can now add a pet fee to your pricing. If you choose to charge a pet fee, it'll be spread out equally over the course of the stay and shown both as part of the nightly rate, and in the total price at checkout.

What percent of Airbnbs allow pets? ›

Pet friendliness is among the top desired amenities among Airbnb and Booking.com guests, and no more than 3% of Airbnb rentals are pet-friendly in any given market. Allowing pets in your short-term rental can result in more bookings, but also exposes your home to the possible dangers and damages that a pet can cause.

What is the average pet fee on Airbnb? ›

The average pet fee is $20 per day or a $100 flat rate. We can see this in the following graphs which show the distribution of fees by the type of fee charged (flat rate or per night). For both types of fees, there is some right-skew to the data which is bringing the average up.

Why does Airbnb charge for pets? ›

By adding a pet fee, you no longer need to request one through our Resolution Center after you accept a booking—or chase guests who are slow to pay it. But remember: It should only be used to cover the cost of the expected cleaning you'd do after hosting fuzzy guests.

Can an Airbnb host ask for service dog papers? ›

According to Airbnb service animal policy, guests don't need to carry documentation with them when staying at an Airbnb. However, as a host, you are allowed to ask the following questions: What task is the service animal trained to do?

Do you have to tell Airbnb host about service dog? ›

Guests are allowed to be accompanied by service animals during a stay or Experience and are not required to disclose the presence of a service animal before booking. A Host may qualify for an exemption in certain circ*mstances — for instance, if the service animal directly threatens their health or safety.

How does Airbnb punish guests? ›

Airbnb may take steps up to and including suspending or removing a guest, Host, or listing from the Airbnb platform if they fail to comply with our policies. Where a listing is advertised as party or event friendly, we may suspend the listing until the violating content is removed.

How does Airbnb protect hosts from squatters? ›

Airbnb offers protection against squatters to its hosts through its Host Guarantee and Host Protection Insurance policies. The Host Guarantee provides protection for up to $1 million in damages to eligible property in the rare event of guest damage that is not resolved directly with the guest.

Can Airbnb suspend a host? ›

In addition to actions we may take for violations of our ground rules for Hosts, Airbnb may suspend or remove individual listings or accounts for violations of our other terms or policies.

Do Airbnb hosts spy on guests? ›

Hosts are not allowed to have security cameras and recording devices that monitor any part of a listing's interior, such as the listing's hallway, bedroom, bathroom, living room, or guest house, even if they're turned off or disconnected. Hidden security cameras are strictly prohibited.

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