The host problem
A major event hits the calendar. Hotels look expensive. Airbnb
suggestions jump. Comparable listings start showing strange weekend
prices. The easy mistake is asking, “How high can I go?”
Ask instead: “What price can convert at the right lead time without
damaging the rest of the calendar?” You need a first grid, a lead-time
rule, and a way to decide whether the market has earned a higher
price.
The event pricing rule
Anchor the event window to expected ANR first.
Expected ANR means the average nightly rate you reasonably expect
before event hype distorts your judgment. It is not your dream rate, the
highest hotel rate you can find, or the top of Airbnb’s suggested
range.
Early event pricing should signal value. It should not test
desperation. A huge event six months out still attracts planners, not
last-minute buyers. Scarcity can justify stronger pricing later, but the
market has to show you that scarcity first.
Event pricing grid
Use this grid for a major demand event roughly 150 to 180 days out.
Start with expected ANR, then multiply from there.
| Night type | Multiplier vs. expected ANR | Operator read |
|---|---|---|
| Monday / Tuesday | 0.55-0.65x | Keep weak nights bookable. |
| Wednesday, normal | 0.60-0.70x | Preserve midweek stability. |
| Wednesday, event night | 0.90-1.00x | Show event awareness. |
| Thursday | 0.80-1.00x | Bundle into the weekend. |
| Friday | 1.25-1.60x | Signal event premium. |
| Saturday, peak | 1.60-2.10x | Protect the best night. |
| Sunday | 0.80-1.05x | Capture spillover. |
If you exceed roughly 2.1x expected ANR at 150 to 180 days out, you
need a real reason. A sold-out citywide event can support a premium, but
early pricing still needs conversion logic.
Simple example
Assume expected ANR is $200. A strong event Saturday six months out
may belong around $320 to $420, but Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday
should not automatically jump to the same level. The event premium needs
shape.
| Night | Example price | Pricing logic |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | $120 | Keep weak midweek bookable. |
| Tuesday | $120 | Keep weak midweek bookable. |
| Wednesday | $140 | Add modest support unless event demand lands here. |
| Thursday | $190 | Shape a longer stay into the weekend. |
| Friday | $300 | Price a clear event premium. |
| Saturday | $390 | Protect the peak night. |
| Sunday | $190 | Capture spillover and extend stays. |
This grid tells the market a clear story: Saturday carries the
premium, Friday supports the peak, Thursday and Sunday shape the stay,
and midweek nights stay realistic enough to attach.
Lead-time adjustment rules
| Window | Move | Watch |
|---|---|---|
| 150-180 days out | Set the grid and hold. | Planners, saves, hotel posture. |
| 90-60 days out | Look for concentration. | Weekend attention, comps, hotel supply. |
| 45-30 days out | Judge event strength. | Compression, exposed shoulders. |
| 21-14 days out | Price scarcity where visible. | Tight supply, strong peak nights. |
| Inside 10 days | Treat inventory risk as real. | Gap shape, day strength, demand. |
A price that makes sense at 180 days can look too soft at 14 days. A
price that makes sense inside 10 days can look reckless at 150 days.
When to hold / cut /
raise / reshape / wait
| Move | Use it when | Avoid it when |
|---|---|---|
| Hold | The event sits outside the normal booking window. | The only reason is discomfort. |
| Cut | Weak midweek, orphan nights, or exposed shoulders threaten revenue capture. |
Friday or Saturday still shows real event support. |
| Raise | Supply tightens, hotel prices stay firm, and peak-night attention improves. |
The only evidence is the event name. |
| Reshape | Thursday or Sunday can turn two nights into three or four. | Minimum-stay rules would block likely buyers. |
| Wait | Lead time says your buyer has not arrived yet. | The booking window has opened and your listing shows no meaningful signal. |
Cut exposed weak nights before you attack the strongest event
night.
Cancellation note
A cancellation during an event window creates a new pricing decision.
The canceled booking’s original rate does not control the reopened
night. Current lead time, gap shape, occupancy, and remaining demand
control the move. Keep canceled revenue out of live accommodation
revenue. For deeper recovery logic, use
.
What to do this week
- Pick expected ANR before you touch the event dates.
- Build the first grid from the multiplier table.
- Price Friday and Saturday as premium nights.
- Use Thursday and Sunday to support longer stays.
- Keep Monday through Wednesday realistic unless the event supports
them. - Recheck at 90, 60, 30, 14, and 10 days out.
Use to keep
the grid consistent. If you need the metric basics first, start with
.