Hi Everyone out there I'm Dr Shailesh Bhadla from India I'm ...
Hi Everyone out there I'm Dr Shailesh Bhadla from India I'm a passionate traveller and wildlife conservator since school time...
I have just seen that the new minimum requirement for a Superhost is 100 nights. This is insane and to my mind contrary to the Airbnb ethos. We have been Superhosts since we initially qualified 3 years ago. However we only rent our house out at weekends and not every weekend. On average we rent out 60 nights a year and no way will we ever do 100. So this massively favours commercial (and often characterless) lets rather than people's homes.
If they persist with the 100 night per annum plan we will lose our Superhost status despite having 0% cancellations an 4.9 rating.
I'm sure loads of fantastic Superhosts will lose their superhost status and this seems so unfair.
I've just checked my performance and see the following:
This is a misunderstanding. It is 10 completed stays OR 100 nights over three stays. As long as you host 10 reservations within the year, you will maintain your Superhost status.
Sorry @Emilia42 - didn't realise you'd already posted that, when I was posting mine below 🙂
These are the current requirements to become a superhost.
The 100 night requirement really only applies to hosts who take longer-term bookings. In reality, any host can become a "superhost" in the space of less than a fortnight (and many do), by hosting just 10 single night bookings. Which makes a complete mockery of Airbnb's claims that "superhosts are experienced hosts who provide a shining example for other hosts, and extraordinary experiences for their guests". But that's how it is.
Sounds like you have misread it @Clare43
This is not new. Airbnb changed the requirement last year.
If you are still booking 10 trips you will be fine.
I have a problem with the 100-night minimum, as I have a 5-day minimum (was 7-day until recently) and many guests who stay for a full month. I also list on Airbnb for only 4-5 months each year. For the first time in years, I probably won't make Superhost this quarter, even though I had 2 guests for a total 44 nights in the past 2 months alone. By contrast, those who accept 1, 2, or 3 night stays can easily exceed 10 stays with only 30-40 nights total. Clearly, the 100-bight minimum for Superhost discriminates against hosts with many long-term guests.
Airbnb should be overjoyed to get their 13-17% in guest+host fees when I have a guest who stays for a full month. Instead, I'm being penalized for this by the Superhpst formula. To think that some exec paid well in the 6-figures, plus stock options, sits their corner office with a great view of San Francisco and doesn't understand this...it's shameful.
@Jon194 , Jon if you have had 44 nights in two months ,then over a year , you will have 100 nights . Superhost is calculated every three months but taken over the entire preceding year. H
I host only long term guests and it's not difficult to wrack up 3 stays = 100 nights over a year. @Helen3 is correct, in that, even though the assessment is done quarterly, each time it assesses the previous year. So, you don't need 100 nights in the past three months.
The only time I got close to not meeting the minimum was due to COVID and lockdowns and other restrictions. Even then, I just about managed. Without those restrictions, it's not that difficult at all. The only hindrance that I can see presently is the Summer Release meaning a lot of hosts are getting far fewer bookings than before. I am still meeting the minimum number of stays/nights criteria, but as I am also accepting direct bookings (not really getting any from Airbnb now except for repeat guests), those will not count.