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Updated over 6 years ago on . Most recent reply
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What Would You Do? San Francisco Medium-Term AirBnB Rental
Hello BP Community -
I would love to get your insight: I rented a 3BR/2BA home 5 blocks from my house with permission from the landlord to sub-lease to business travelers--very excited to start a rental business! I have spent the last 2 weeks painting, furnishing and feverishly buying bedding, towels and throw pillows. I just booked the rest of December for a net gain of about $1000 this month. I'm taking my inspiration from the OG Bay Area Rental Arbitrage Ninjas Al Williamson and J. Martin.
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS about:
- how to improve the AirBnB listing below?
- how to maximize cash flow?
- how to find different tenant sources?
- key tips to scale the business?
I WELCOME ALL CONSTRUCTIVE FEEDBACK! (I realize the photos suck--the professional AirBnB photos will be ready any day now.)
@Account Closed
The AirBnB listing is at:
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/21885572…
I'm conservatively anticipating about $500/month in income before taxes during year 1 based on the numbers below, which come from my experience AirBnBing my own home in the same neighborhood. Once I've got my 3 AirBnB reviews and a good list of client organizations, I'm confident I can make $1000/month in year 2.
EXPENSES & ASSUMPTIONS
- Costs are about $4600 a month ($4000 in rent plus expenses of $500-$600 including utilities, wifi, renter's insurance, supplies, etc.).
- 20% vacancy for most of the year
- 15% discounted AirBnB rate for first 3 bookings
REVENUES & ASSUMPTIONS
I'm anticipating rent revenues of:
- $5500 for December (collected already)
- $4600 for January-February (break-even, including 15% discount)
- $5000 from March-May (including 15% discount)
- $6000 from June-September (assuming just 10% vacancy in summer)
- $5500 during Oct-November.
Once I book it out 5-6 months in advance, I can "introduce" my cautious wife to another rental home and start scaling the business...
Thank you folks for your wisdom!
Most Popular Reply
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@Jen L. - Thanks for asking! It’s going well. I am fully booked for January, so I am covering all my costs during these early/winter months, which is my goal. I’m looking for 30+ day guests beginning Feb 1.
PAST MONTH
Since my last post, I signed another lease for a 3/2 home with an in-law near the SF Airport. I’m rehabbing it a bit which the owner loves, and I am very confident it will be a money-maker. I’ve got the studio unit fully prepped, painted and booked solid from Jan 4-April 28 through AirBnB. I will get the main home fixed and furnished in the next 2 weeks so it’s guest-ready by Jan 16. The snowball is rolling!
EARLY OBSERVATIONS AND LEARNING FROM THE PROS
- Most business travelers want smaller units (studio/1BR). However there are plenty of profitable ways to rent out larger properties (e.g. the “dormer” approach advocated by Al Williamson or serving families traveling for 1+ year assignments)
- Renting a home with in-law unit or a multi-unit building can be very profitable compared to a single-unit home, e.g. 1.5x
- There are lots of professional communities to tap into to find guests.Once you find one you like to serve that fits your location, you can network and keep demand high without needing to do a lot of marketing. (My January guests are returning steelworkers who wanted to come back and re-rent the same property for another month after the holiday week)
- It’s really important to develop simple, repeatable checklists/processes for everything to save time! (E.g. pre-programmed emails, House guide, TV Instructions, WiFi info, etc.