Close Menu
  • Home
  • Financial
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Real Estate
  • Debt Relief
  • Subscribe Now
What's Hot

Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she’s helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune

December 10, 2025

More Deals, Lower Pricing—A Look at What’s Going On at Foreclosure Auctions in Late 2025

December 10, 2025

Take a peek inside NAR’s legal strategy with Jon Waclawski

December 10, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
creditreddit.org
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • Financial
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Real Estate
  • Debt Relief
  • Subscribe Now
creditreddit.org
Home » How I Took a Dead Airbnb and Turned it into $25K in 90 Days
Personal Finance

How I Took a Dead Airbnb and Turned it into $25K in 90 Days

joshBy joshSeptember 15, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Copy Link Email
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
How I Took a Dead Airbnb and Turned it into K in 90 Days
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


In This Article

Now and then, you come across a property on Airbnb that makes you scratch your head. The house looks great, the location is solid, the kind of place you’d imagine would be booked out for months… and yet, it’s sitting there like a ghost town.

That’s what happened to me earlier this year. This owner had a beautiful property in a great spot, but in five months, he’d only gotten one single booking. 

One. That was it. 

Meanwhile, his mortgage, utilities, and all the other bills didn’t care whether the house was making money or not. 

I couldn’t stop thinking: How can a place this good perform this poorly?

How I Found the Property

I wasn’t even looking for him specifically. I was just doing my usual thing: zooming around on the Airbnb map, looking at what houses were pulling in bookings and which weren’t.

I noticed something unusual: right next to listings that were booked solid, there was an incredibly unique house, yet it never had any bookings on the calendar.

So I dug a little deeper.

First, I used the estimated location Airbnb shows on their map. From there, I started scanning the listing photos like a detective. Street numbers on mailboxes, the angle of the driveway, a roofline in the background, even drone shots that gave away nearby landmarks. Little clues most people would scroll past.

Once I had a good idea of where it sat, I pulled up cross streets and started comparing old MLS photos. One by one, I matched up siding, windows, and porches until finally, everything lined up. That was the house.

From there, the last piece I needed: the owner. I tracked down his info, reached out, followed up (probably more times than he liked), and after a couple of months of radio silence, he finally picked up the phone.

When he told me he’d only had one booking all year, I knew it was my time to shine.

The Red Flags

The moment I pulled up his Airbnb listing, it was like a checklist of everything not to do as a host:

The photos looked like they’d been taken on a flip phone in 2006.

He didn’t allow pets (in an area where everyone wants to bring their dog).

He had a strict three-night minimum.

And the worst offense of all: no dynamic pricing.

Basically, he was invisible. Nobody was finding this place, and the few who did click were bouncing immediately.

The Quick Fixes

The first thing I told him was that we needed new photos. Guests shop with their eyes, and his pictures weren’t selling anything. 

We got a pro photographer in, staged the place, and the house finally looked as good online as it did in real life. Almost every Airbnb host is starting to realize how important photos are, so this is the bare minimum and was not going to move the needle a lot. It was an easy first step, though.

Then I tackled the pet issue. I explained how pet-friendly properties pull way more bookings. We built in a small fee, added damage protection, and dog owners (aka half of Airbnb guests) could consider staying there.

Next, the minimum stay issue. He had a rigid three-night minimum, which looked good on paper but cut him off from the most significant chunk of demand: weekend travelers. Instead of manually lowering it to two nights and hoping for the best, we turned on PriceLabs’ Dynamic Minimum Stay feature.

Now, the system automatically adjusts its minimum-stay rules based on demand, booking gaps, and seasonality. For example, if there’s a short two-night gap between reservations, PriceLabs opens it up to fill that space. However, for busier weekends or peak seasons, the rules flex to protect revenue without compromising his core requirements. The result? Guests got flexibility, he kept control, and his calendar stayed booked without constant tinkering.

That alone fixed a lot. But the real game changer was dynamic pricing.

The Game Changer

Here’s the thing about Airbnb: if you’re not using dynamic pricing, you’re leaving money on the table. Guests don’t pay the same on a Tuesday in February as they do on July 4th weekend. Without adjusting prices to match demand, you either look overpriced (and miss bookings) or underpriced (and lose revenue).

That’s where PriceLabs came in. The algorithm automatically updated his rates every day: weekdays were adjusted to stay competitive and attract bookings, while weekends and holidays were pushed higher to maximize profits. Orphan gaps (those random one- or two-day holes that usually went unbooked) were also covered by automated rules, so nothing went to waste.

Before, he was blocking off dates just so his cleaner wouldn’t get confused. With PriceLabs, everything stayed open, optimized, and easy to manage. Plus, by adjusting both pricing and minimum stay rules dynamically, his property finally started showing up in weekend searches. That shift alone unlocked a whole new wave of demand.

You might also like

The Results

Three months later, the turnaround was insane: from one sad $1,000 booking all year to $25,000 in revenue in just 90 days.

His July 4th weekend turned out to be the best weekend nightly rate he’d ever had. And we’d already locked in a $3,000 Thanksgiving booking months in advance.

Instead of stressing over bills, the owner was finally excited about his property again. And the best part? The system was basically running itself.

What This Taught Me

Honestly, this wasn’t some miracle property. It was just a good house with a bad strategy. And I see this all the time. Most struggling listings come down to a handful of things:

Terrible photos

Rules that scare off guests (like no pets or long minimums)

Pricing that never adjusts

Fix those, and you give yourself a fighting chance. Add a tool like PriceLabs, and you can actually start playing the game the way it’s meant to be played: competitively, automatically, and built for profit.

Final Thoughts

If you’ve got a listing that isn’t performing, don’t give up. It’s probably not the house. It’s the setup.

This one simple shift, from static pricing and clunky rules to an automated, data-driven system, was enough to take a property from almost nothing to $25K in three months.

And that’s the power of doing it right.

25K Airbnb days dead turned
Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email Copy Link
josh
  • Website

Related Posts

More Deals, Lower Pricing—A Look at What’s Going On at Foreclosure Auctions in Late 2025

By joshDecember 10, 2025

Stop Guessing Your Airbnb Prices: A Practical Revenue Playbook For 2026

By joshDecember 9, 2025

Mid-Term Rentals Have a Bright Future—But Many Investors are Spooked By the Practical Difficulties

By joshDecember 8, 2025

Rent Spikes are a Thing of the Past—But Investors Can Look Forward to a Stable Multifamily Market Instead

By joshDecember 5, 2025

Why Investors Are Feeling Increasingly Positive About the Multifamily Market

By joshDecember 5, 2025

A New Fed Chairman is Coming Soon—Here’s What Their Potential Low-Rate Policy Will Mean For Investors

By joshDecember 5, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

How to Build a More Predictable Financial Routine

November 24, 2025231 Views

Social Security payments to go up 2.8% next year while polls show three-fourths of seniors think 3% isn’t enough to keep up with rising prices | Fortune

October 24, 202542 Views

Trump Floats 50-Year Mortgages: Cash Flow Boost or Affordability Illusion?

November 13, 202540 Views

Why Mortgage Rates are Rising as the Fed Keeps Cutting

November 4, 202533 Views
Don't Miss

Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she’s helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune

December 10, 20254 Mins Read0 Views

The actress, director, and wild-style futurist Natasha Lyonne is fascinated by technology. She speaks of…

More Deals, Lower Pricing—A Look at What’s Going On at Foreclosure Auctions in Late 2025

December 10, 2025

Take a peek inside NAR’s legal strategy with Jon Waclawski

December 10, 2025

OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap says code red will ‘force’ the company to focus, as the ChatGPT maker ramps up enterprise push | Fortune

December 9, 2025
Demo
Our Picks

Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she’s helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune

December 10, 2025

More Deals, Lower Pricing—A Look at What’s Going On at Foreclosure Auctions in Late 2025

December 10, 2025

Take a peek inside NAR’s legal strategy with Jon Waclawski

December 10, 2025
Most Popular

Trump’s trade deals are illegal, Piper Sandler warns, predicting a Supreme Court smackdown by June 2026 | Fortune

July 25, 20250 Views

The markets’ reaction to Trump hides a darker truth that puts the American economy at risk, Piper Sandler warns | Fortune

August 26, 20250 Views

Investors Are Controlling the Housing Market

September 4, 20250 Views
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Subscribe Now
© 2025 ThemeSphere.

Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.