It took months, but as a U.S. Citizen, I finally got a Mexic...
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It took months, but as a U.S. Citizen, I finally got a Mexican Tax ID (RFC) and registered with AirBnb. Here is what you mus...
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Hey Airbnb hosts, started this list as an answer to a question but it turned up pretty big so im sharing with every one. Hope its helpful to some people and please upvote it if you liked it.
Here's what I’ve found so far in order to promote my listings:
That pretty much sums up what information I have gathered and tried during the past few months.
A nice round total of 25 tips to promote your listing.
I hope it’s not very overwhelming and that it is helpful for new hosts that want to get in the game!
Also i'd love to hear the opinion of some more experienced hosts.
Please gimme the thumbs-up if you found this helpful
Regards,
Harry K.
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Live your myth in Greece:
Mykonos: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/13655047
Athens downtown #1: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/13337047
Athens downtown #2: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/13567058
Family villa near Athens: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/13364268
Hey @Amy352,
Thanks for your kind words.
If you think you will enjoy further reading i have a more extensive guide with 60 tips here
Be sure to hit the thumbs up if lilked the posts, so that more users can find them and read them 🙂
Regarding your question, Airbnb likes to verify members through different ways, social profiles, email, phone # and official documents (like your government ID or passport). This makes other users feel safer that their host is actually a person who is committed to this thing and not just someone who made a fake email and created an account 🙂
Here is how to manage your verification methods:
In your Airbnb profile (not here on the community forums) click on the upper right corner on your face icon, then in the menu that opens, click on "Edit Profile":
In the next Screen, on the left side menu, click on "Trust and Verification":
Here you can add your social profiles and other types of verification that you like (should be in the bottom part of the screen that reads "Not yet verified" :
I hope this is helpful. The instructions are about the web site of Airbnb. There should be a way to do it from a mobile app but i went through this procedure as it is easier and available to most of the users.
Hope it helped 🙂
Regards,
Harry
Being a senior Widower living alone, it is important I have nice guests whom I feel comfortable with, especially as I always go the extra mile to make sure they feel at home in my Conservation 105 year old cottage in London. So, I only take female single ladies and so far have been very lucky with all of them. So many different nationalities and cultures that I always say "If I now cannot travel the world, then, the world comes to me."
In this respect, I always make sure that they ask me all the correct questions before they come and I in turn do the same of them. I like to know their food preferences for breakfast, which I make for them, also sharing my evening meal with them if they so want Otherwise, they use my kitchen to cook and often make me a meal, too, like my last Chinese guest did and now my Turkish girl is also doing from time to time.
I also enjoy taking them out in the car to local beauty spots which they would not normally know about, and tomorrow my Turkish girl and I are taking a picnic to St. Albans. As some of them are around the house a lot either studying or working on their laptops, it is important they have a break and me also, thus` killing two birds with one stone`.
I have made two Videos for Airbnb over the years and am now a Superhost, however, when I first started out, it was quite difficult and I made a few mistakes, but, have learned from them, thankfully.
One has to be very flexible and patient in this `game` I found and no two guests are alike. We hosts often forget that they are stressed out when they arrive in a new country, new home and often a new job or college to get to grips with.
I consider this job to be a hobby as well as just making money, so important that things run as smoothly as possible on both sides!.
Regards,
Jean.
Hi Jean! You sound like you are a great host. Keep it up!
Thank you for your post Harry. It’s really helpful and much needed. Thanks again!
Thanks for sharing
This will be helpful to me
thanks so much for this guide! As a newer host, it has been a learning experience for me but will try your suggestions and see how things go!! 😎
Hi @Harry22, all these tips is a good guide to follow. Thank you for your work.
Hi @Cassandra374, I've added Harry's tag to you topic so that he gets a notification of your comment 😊
You're very welcome @Cassandra374. If you have any questions feel free to start a conversation by clicking here 👈
I think @Harry22 's post was the one that made me decide to finally find some time and just start as a Host in Airbnb rather than being always a guest. I do not feel confident enough to give out the whole house so started with a private room and bathroom. I dread the thought of not being able to sleep all night thinking of strangers going over all my stuff and that is the best case scenario I have in mind 😛 The worst begins with a telephone telling me that they burned the house down lol
But I love hosting friends and relatives all year long so why not host guests and make something out of it?
Anyhow, I have followed all of Harry's advices (at least the ones I can for the time being) and I am waiting since yesterday to see what will happen. I did urge friends to list as guests in Airbnb and wishlist my listing, I have spent a day searching google/airbnb and bing with terms I used in the listing, I have completed all profiles/tabs/directions/quidebooks/I have even listed on the map even every gas station/restaurant/bakery/shop near my house.
I didn't manage to find a 10 dollar CO detector (even in Aliexpress.com) but I will get one from Amazon uk for a couple more. I have more than 30 photos uploaded but although I got them with High Resolution in an iphone 6s Plus I think that once they are uploaded they get a bit compressed in size. I made sure to have the lowest price but I am just wondering if that being too low means that with no review/guests yet if people will consider this some kind of a trap.
So, after doing at least half and even more in Harry's List I checked and my yesterday's newbie listing appears (if not first always) in the top results. I have no idea of course if that is widely extended to other users or just me who (like a lunatic) calls friends and says please search this for me lol
I am wondering how breakfast and cleaning works for Greek Tax Law. I had read that offering services like meals or cleaning make that a business rental instead of a simple house renting and that means more Taxes (from 11% goes to +35%). Am I mistaken?
Anyhow, thank you Harry for providing this amazing User Guide for New Hosts, I have no idea how it will work out for me and my listing but I would have never though all of these actions without reading your article. Kudos 🙂
#newhost
I'm a newbie host and used a lot of these techniques listed. I listed my place just a few days ago at cheap but fair prices compared to others and my place is officially 60% booked for November. I'm so ecstatic! Looking forward to my new venture as a host!
I'm a new host...
What are "verifications" please?
Hi @Ian-and-Charlene0! "Verification" here means that you are already being verified as "genuine", not a scam. There are a few ways to get verified. Either by connecting your AirBnB account with your Facebook account, or by providing AirBnB your government ID (scan and upload). You will get more bookings as your guests know that they could trust you better. All the best to you my friend, hosting is definitely fun! 🙂