The host problem
When a host opens the calendar and sees open nights, the default
instinct is to cut price. Sometimes that is right. Often it is not.
Cutting is one of five possible moves. Using it every time turns
pricing into a reflex instead of a decision. The calendar shows you a
situation. Your job is to match the move to the situation — not to react
to the visual of empty nights.
This article defines all five moves and gives you a simple rule for
when each one applies.
The five moves
1. Hold
Hold means keeping your current rate without change.
Hold is the right move when:
- The booking window for that period has not opened yet
- Pace is normal for the lead time — the month is not underperforming,
it is just early - You recently raised rate and need to see whether conversion
follows
Hold is not passivity. It is a deliberate choice to protect price
while demand arrives on its normal timeline.
The beginner mistake is treating hold as a failure to act. Cutting
before the booking window opens gives rate away for free.
2. Cut
Cut means reducing rate on specific nights or clusters.
Cut is the right move when:
- Nights enter a late-cycle window (typically inside 14–21 days) and
remain fully exposed - Weekday or shoulder inventory shows real rejection — not just early
emptiness - An orphan night (an isolated single- or two-night gap) will not
attach to adjacent bookings at current rate - A minimum-stay rule blocks the booking and you cannot or do not want
to reshape instead
Cut is a targeted move, not a broadcast. Cutting all nights because a
few nights look slow is rate destruction. Cut the specific nights that
actually need absorption.
3. Raise
Raise means increasing rate on specific nights or across a
period.
Raise is the right move when:
- Occupancy looks healthy but RevPAR is lagging — the listing books
fast but does not earn enough per available night - Weekend nights book immediately, signaling demand you are not
capturing - Event demand concentrates and comparable listings price higher than
your current rate - You are at full or near-full occupancy well before the relevant
booking window closes
Raise requires evidence. If you raise without a demand signal, you
stall bookings without a payoff.
4. Reshape
Reshape means changing minimum nights, check-in rules, or pricing
differentials between nights — without necessarily raising or cutting
the nightly rate.
Reshape is the right move when:
- Two- or three-night gaps appear that a rate cut alone cannot
fill - Short stays produce high turnover that erodes profit even if they
fill nights - A Thursday or Sunday pricing adjustment would pull longer stays
without requiring a rate change elsewhere - The problem is booking shape, not rate level
Reshape is underused. Most hosts only think about price per night.
But a listing that turns every booking into a two-day churn at $150 may
perform worse than a listing with fewer, longer bookings at the same
rate.
For more on turnover economics:
5. Wait
Wait means doing nothing because the situation does not yet require
action.
Wait is the right move when:
- The lead time is long enough that the demand picture has not
developed - You made a recent adjustment and need time to see the effect
- Saves and views signal interest but no booking has converted
yet - The open nights are midweek nights in a period that typically books
late
Wait is not the same as hold. Hold means keeping your current rate
because it is correct. Wait means pausing to observe before committing
to any move.
Many hosts confuse wait with inaction. It is a deliberate stance. You
wait until the data gives you a reason to move.
How the five moves connect
The moves are not a ladder. You do not work through them in order.
You match the move to the calendar situation.
A useful question for each open cluster:
How many days until check-in? What does the booking history for this
listing say about when demand typically arrives? Does the current pace
match that history?
If pace is normal and lead time is long: Wait or
Hold. If nights enter late-cycle exposure and remain
open: consider Cut or Reshape. If
demand is concentrating and you are underpriced: Raise.
If booking shape is creating friction: Reshape.
What to do this week
- Open your calendar and identify every open cluster in the next 60
days. - For each cluster, note the number of days until check-in.
- Ask which of the five moves fits each cluster. Write it down before
touching any price. - Check whether any moves you planned are cuts driven by the visual of
empty nights rather than an actual late-cycle exposure problem.
For calendar reading guidance:
How
to Read an Airbnb Calendar Before You Change Price
For each of the five moves in depth: