The host problem

Airbnb Smart Pricing suggests a number for each night on your
calendar. Most hosts accept it, or accept a version of it with a floor
price set somewhere below what they actually want.

That is not a pricing strategy. That is delegated guessing.

Smart Pricing reflects platform-side demand signals. Those signals
can help, but they do not replace your own cost structure, booking
history, lead-time expectations, or pricing judgment. Airbnb’s goal and
your goal are related but not identical. Airbnb benefits when your
calendar books. You benefit when your calendar books at a rate that
covers your costs and earns a return worth the effort.

The number Smart Pricing suggests is not wrong by design. The problem
is that it has no visibility into your actual performance history, your
costs, your lead-time expectations, or your threshold for cutting rate
before the market asks you to.


What Smart Pricing actually
does

Smart Pricing adjusts your suggested nightly rate based on demand
signals Airbnb can see: search volume, comparable listings, historical
booking patterns, events, seasonality.

It does not know:

It fills in those gaps with platform-wide assumptions. For a lot of
nights, those assumptions are reasonable. For your specific listing, in
your specific submarket, in your specific demand window, they may not
be.


The piece Smart Pricing
cannot replace

Pricing judgment requires you to read your calendar and your numbers
before you touch rate.

That means knowing:

What nights are actually exposed. An open Friday in
June at 90 days out may not be a problem. An open Friday in June at 10
days out may be urgent. Smart Pricing does not always make that
distinction clearly.

What your ANR is doing. If your accommodation
revenue per booked night is rising but occupancy is softening, that may
be correct pricing at work, not a failure. If Smart Pricing responds to
the soft occupancy by pulling rate down, it may erase a gain you
earned.

What the booking window says about your listing. If
your market books late, Smart Pricing may panic-discount too early. If
your market books early, Smart Pricing may not raise fast enough when
demand concentrates.

What your RevPAR actually is. RevPAR — accommodation
revenue divided by available nights — connects rate and occupancy in one
number. Smart Pricing never gives you this. It only gives you a rate
suggestion.

If RevPAR feels abstract right now, start with
RevPAR Explained for
Airbnb Hosts
before changing your prices.


The guardrail
minimum is not a strategy either

Most hosts who think about pricing at all set a floor — a minimum
price Smart Pricing cannot go below. That helps prevent the worst
discounts.

It does not tell you:

A floor without a framework is still guessing, just with a lower
bound.


What a real pricing
position looks like

You do not need a revenue management system. You need a few numbers
and a simple read of your calendar before you accept or override what
Smart Pricing suggests.

The numbers worth tracking:

These four numbers tell you whether your calendar is performing,
whether your rate is holding, and whether the booking pace is normal for
where you sit in the calendar. Smart Pricing cannot read those signals
for you. It can only suggest a rate based on platform-wide demand.

Once you track these numbers, even roughly, you can make a decision
Smart Pricing cannot: hold price because the booking window has not
opened yet, rather than cut because the calendar looks thin.

That is the beginning of a strategy.


What to do this week

  1. Pull last month’s accommodation revenue and booked nights. Divide
    one by the other. That is your ANR. Write it down.
  2. Pull the number of available nights last month. Divide your
    accommodation revenue by available nights. That is your RevPAR. Write it
    down.
  3. Look at your forward calendar. For each open cluster, ask: does this
    booking window typically produce bookings this far out, or does demand
    arrive later?
  4. Look at what Smart Pricing is suggesting for each open cluster. Ask
    whether the suggestion reflects your actual situation or a platform-wide
    average that does not apply to your listing.

If you want a spreadsheet to track these numbers:

For a framework that connects these metrics to decisions:
Revenue
Capture Index