Pet fee - how much do you charge?

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Pet fee - how much do you charge?

Was just thinking about my pet fee and was wondering what everyone else charges? 

1 Best Answer
Gerri7
Level 4
Birchwood, WI

We charge $20 per night per dog, and collect a fully refundable $250 security deposit per dog. Our maximum is 2 dogs. Guests are asked to complete and sign a copy of our Dog Agreement (contract). We have several restrictions - no puppies under 1 year, dogs must be spayed or neutered (less likely to mark, to be aggressive, to roam, often are more calm, etc.), dogs must be well behaved on leash, and owners must agree to keep dogs on leash whenever they are outdoors. We have lots of wild critters here - bear, deer, turkeys, fox, eagles, coyotes, etc., and the leash rule is intended to protect wildlife as well as the dogs and our neighbors.  It is amazing how few problems we've had. Vacuums are available to guests at both of our homes and we tell guests if they clean up after the dog/s and there are no damages, we'll refund 100% of the deposit. I don't know how many visiting dogs we've had over the years, but it's a lot. The owners are thrilled to be able to bring them along on vacation, and we have found that dog-owning guests are often better than those without pets. In 5 years we have only withheld money once from the deposit. We have dogs ourselves and allowing them at the rentals is really a win-win. 

 

Sorry this is so long, but I want to add a comment about the new restrictive policy Airbnb has implemented. If you check the 'pets accepted' box, their default is 5 animals (!!! right??) and you're required to enter a per-stay fee. The host has no flexibility to charge per night, instead of per stay.  

 

My workaround is to message guests immediately after booking with a copy of our Dog Agreement. The Agreement contains information about our fees and deposits. I bill through the Resolution Center and, after the stay, I promptly refund the deposits. Not ideal, but there doesn't seem to be any other way to do it.

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93 Replies 93
Brittany542
Level 2
San Luis Obispo, CA

After reading through all of these fantastic answers and suggestions, and the desire for Airbnb to fix the pet charges… 
this is where I am landing. 
We don’t allow pets, because cleaning after dirty people, (have only had 2, out of 50 guests) just seems easier than dirty people and dirty dogs, slobber, toe nail scratching wood floors, etc..
But we are considering, a 2 month stay inquiry with a labordoodle. 

 

Maybe:
$300 refundable animal damage fee.
$650 cleaning fee. (Cleaners come 2x a month @$100 a time + $150 move out clean).
And no pet fee. Or maybe $100. (It’s 2 months). 

1 dog, must be approved, contract signed and deposit paid 3 days before arrival.

David305
Level 3
Diever, The Netherlands

We have always charged per dog, but of course that's not possible on ABB. Our guests book mostly 2–3 dogs, but of course end up paying for just 1 dog. Having just had 3 dogs to stay with, a lot more vacuum cleaning needed than usual (I can't count the times I had to stop and remove the dog hair from the clogged vacuum head) we have decided to increase our standard fee (now for 2 dogs). If guests are staying with 1 or 3 dogs, then we ask guests to let us know, and we will adjust the booking cost to reflect this. Why ABB still doesn't have pet fee options (per pet, per stay, per night) on the site, completely baffles us.

How much is fair to charge for 2 cats and a small dog. Guest is asking to bring them for 45 days . I also have 2 cats ....so not sure if it's a bit too much for the house . He says $300 but I think its too low

Marie8425
Level 10
Buckeye, AZ

i don't charge a pet fee but for me  I made the decision  because though I allow pets my guests are contract workers so I  have had  a  few requests.  When in Hawaii, because of the state guarantee laws we  didn't have a high  volume,  but  I had a large number of room rentals but we only allowed pets   in limited rooms. that way people allergic could ask for a pet free room.  

In Arizona, I learned the hard way so I make it  very clear before I   accept  a pet.  My private rooms are not just  a large free kennel  for your dog.  Barking  can  be the issue.  The dog is in an unfamiliar place and sometimes is just nervous,  but that causes a noise issue for other guests and neighbors.

If it is something you  face regularly..  I  would not present myself as the  cheap alternative for hiring a pet sitter.

In Hawaii, though designated rooms petts do make additional cleaning for us we  figured usually a room our cleaners one hour,  a pet two hours so we included the  cost of  1 hour addition.  For Hawaii also because sometimes multiple rooms inn  a  certain  day,  having 2 hours cleaning of  a room  was  not the  norm  we would  charge the guest for shutting the room  for rental  by 1 day.  Not  the whole rental price  because  no guest  no expense just the loss of profit.

Not every guest was pleased of course but when you can reply with specific expenses you incur allowing their pet and the  fact  that your pricing wouldn't be fair if all  guests were charged.  Then it didn't become a debate about their dog.  It was pricing based on cost not  a number I picked out of the air..  A few changed their  mind  but  not the majority,,.