The host problem
Most pricing mistakes happen before the rate changes. The host sees an open night, skips the review, and acts from pressure.
A checklist will not make every answer obvious. It will stop avoidable mistakes.
The decision this article helps you make
The checklist should end with one move: hold, cut, raise, reshape, or wait.
If the checklist gives you no clear answer, wait and set a review date.
The signal to check first
Lead time comes first.
Count the days between today and each open night. Compare that number to your median BLT.
If most open nights sit outside your booking window, pause. Wait.
How to work through the checklist
Step 1 — Check lead time
For each open night, calculate days until check-in. Compare that number to median BLT.
- Outside the BLT window: wait.
- Inside the BLT window: continue.
Step 2 — Check available nights
Count nights that remain open and bookable. Exclude personal blocks, maintenance, and other unsellable nights.
Step 3 — Check booked nights
Calculate occupancy for the period. Compare to the same point in a prior period.
If occupancy runs 10 percentage points or more below the prior period inside the BLT window, continue the diagnosis.
Step 4 — Check gaps
Identify the pattern:
- Weekday gap
- Orphan night
- Weekend exposure
- Thursday or Sunday shoulder exposure
Each pattern points to a different move.
Step 5 — Check weekends
Look at the next two weekends. Protect Friday and Saturday unless they remain exposed inside a late window.
Step 6 — Check shoulder nights
Use Thursday and Sunday to shape stays. Do not treat them exactly like Friday and Saturday.
Step 7 — Check cancellations
A cancellation creates a new pricing event. Reprice reopened nights based on current lead time and gap shape, not the canceled booking’s original rate.
Step 8 — Choose the move
- Hold: evidence supports the current rate.
- Cut: exposed nights inside the window need absorption.
- Raise: bookings arrive early and conversion stays strong.
- Reshape: minimum-stay or gap shape creates the problem.
- Wait: evidence remains unclear and a review date controls the next step.
What most hosts get wrong
Hosts jump to Step 8. They see an open weekend and cut before checking lead time, available nights, or gap shape.
Run the sequence every time. Lead time always comes first.
What to do this week
- Pull the next 30 days of your calendar.
- List every open night.
- Run each night through Steps 1 to 8.
- Record the move.
- Make only targeted changes.
- Set the next review date.
Where this fits in the STR Signals framework
This checklist turns the five-move framework into a repeatable routine. It structures judgment before emotion gets control of price.
Use When to Hold Your Airbnb Price for a deeper hold decision.