Key Takeaways
- Listings with cleaning fees set at 25% to 50% of their average daily rate earn $64,405 per year, 72% more than listings with no cleaning fee ($37,474) and 13% more than those charging 50% to 75% of ADR.
- Over 300,000 Airbnb hosts removed or lowered their cleaning fees after the platform began showing total price upfront, and roughly 40% of active listings now charge no cleaning fee at all.
- Every $52 increase in cleaning fee makes a listing 13% less likely to score a 4.8 or higher on Airbnb’s value rating, which directly affects search visibility and booking volume.
- The average US cleaning fee is $156 for a 2-bedroom and $210 for a 3-bedroom, but the median is just $75, meaning a small number of very high fees skew the average significantly.
- 89% of Superhosts charge a cleaning fee, and Superhost listings with fees earn 80% more annually ($60,995) than Superhost listings without fees ($33,879).
Listings that charge a cleaning fee between 25% and 50% of their nightly rate earn roughly $27,000 more per year than listings that charge nothing. That is not a rounding error. Across a dataset of 2.4 million active short-term rental listings in 20 countries, that gap is one of the most consistent patterns in the data, and most hosts are sitting on the wrong side of it.
I have spent the better part of four decades working with numbers (my coffee-stained notebooks in Santa Fe could tell you stories), and few pricing questions generate as much confusion as cleaning fees. Hosts agonize over them. Guests complain about them. Airbnb itself has restructured how they appear in search results. The debate has gotten louder, but the data has gotten clearer. Let me walk you through what it actually shows.
What STR Hosts Actually Charge for Cleaning in 2026
The US average cleaning fee is $188, but that number can be misleading. The median is $75, which tells you that a relatively small group of high-fee listings (large homes, luxury properties, resort markets) pulls the average up considerably. Think of it like household income statistics: the average gets inflated by a few outliers at the top, while the median shows you where most people actually land.
Here is what cleaning fees look like when you break them down by property size, based on an analysis of 685,000 US listings:
| Property Size | Average Cleaning Fee | Listings Analyzed |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | $83 | 46,012 |
| 1-Bedroom | $102 | 160,770 |
| 2-Bedroom | $156 | 200,538 |
| 3-Bedroom | $210 | 171,671 |
| 4-Bedroom | $285 | 80,098 |
| 5-Bedroom | $371 | 33,375 |
| 6-Bedroom | $458 | 12,447 |
Those numbers make intuitive sense. A studio takes less time, fewer linens, and fewer supplies than a six-bedroom lake house. But the size of the property is only part of the equation. The real question is not “How much does cleaning cost?” but “How much cleaning fee can my listing support before it starts costing me bookings?”
Airbnb Changed How Guests See Your Cleaning Fee, and 300,000 Hosts Responded
In late 2022, Airbnb introduced an option for guests to see total price (including cleaning fees) in search results instead of just the nightly rate. By April 2025, that total-price display became the global default. The change was significant: for the first time, a $150/night listing with a $200 cleaning fee would look like a $170/night listing in search, not a $150 bargain with a surprise at checkout.
The host response was swift. According to Airbnb, more than 300,000 hosts removed or lowered their cleaning fees after the transparency rollout began. Roughly 40% of active listings now charge no cleaning fee at all. That is a massive behavioral shift in just a few years.
But here is where the data gets interesting, so stay with me. Those 40% of hosts who dropped their cleaning fee to zero? They are, on average, leaving money on the table. The question was never whether to charge a cleaning fee. The question is how much.
The Cleaning Fee Sweet Spot That Most Hosts Are Missing
This is the section that should reshape how you think about cleaning fee strategy. When you look at annual revenue sorted by cleaning fee as a percentage of average daily rate, the pattern is unmistakable:
| Cleaning Fee as % of ADR | Annual Revenue | Occupancy Rate | Listings in Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| No fee (0%) | $37,474 | 39.9% | 47,043 |
| Under 25% | $59,010 | 44.7% | 34,048 |
| 25% to 50% (optimal) | $64,405 | 46.2% | 169,135 |
| 50% to 75% | $57,176 | 46.3% | 219,043 |
| 75% to 100% | $51,894 | 44.8% | 126,272 |
| Over 100% | $44,493 | 41.2% | 89,456 |
The 25% to 50% bracket earns 72% more annual revenue than the no-fee tier and 13% more than the next bracket up. The gap is not subtle. If your ADR is $200, the sweet spot puts your cleaning fee between $50 and $100. If your ADR is $300, you are looking at $75 to $150.
Don’t let the simplicity of that formula fool you. What makes this data powerful is what it reveals about guest psychology. Going too low (or to zero) signals something to guests, possibly that the property is budget-tier or that the host is not investing in professional cleaning. Going too high triggers what behavioral economists call “fee aversion,” where a visible surcharge creates more resistance than the same amount folded into a higher nightly rate.
The sweet spot is where the cleaning fee feels proportional. Think of it like tipping at a restaurant: 20% feels normal, 50% feels outrageous, and 0% feels like something is off.
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How Cleaning Fees Affect Your Ratings (and Your Search Ranking)
The revenue data is compelling on its own, but the ratings data adds another layer. Research from BnB Facts analyzing 250,000 US listings found that for every $52 increase in cleaning fee, a listing becomes 13% less likely to score a 4.8 or higher on Airbnb’s value rating. That matters because Airbnb’s search algorithm weighs ratings heavily. A lower value score means fewer impressions, fewer clicks, and fewer bookings.
Here is the part that surprises most hosts: higher cleaning fees do not produce higher cleanliness ratings. The data shows virtually no correlation between what you charge for cleaning and how guests rate the cleanliness of your property. A listing charging $31 averaged a 4.74 cleanliness score. A listing charging $255 averaged 4.77. Guests are not judging whether the cleaning was worth the price. They are judging whether the place was clean, period.
There is also a small but measurable search visibility effect. Listings without a cleaning fee receive a 48% first-page impression rate compared to 44% for listings with a fee. That 4-percentage-point gap is worth noting, but it needs context: the no-fee listings that get more impressions still earn substantially less revenue. Visibility alone does not pay the mortgage.
The Bundle vs. Itemize Question
Since Airbnb now folds cleaning fees into the displayed nightly rate in search results anyway, some hosts have asked: why not just roll the cleaning cost into the nightly rate entirely and set the cleaning fee to zero?
The logic sounds clean, but the data complicates it. Remember that no-fee listings earn $37,474 per year versus $64,405 for listings in the 25% to 50% bracket. Even after the total-price display change, an itemized cleaning fee in the right range still outperforms a bundled approach.
One reason may be how platforms calculate and display pricing for different stay lengths. A $100 cleaning fee on a one-night stay adds $100 per night to the total price display. That same $100 fee on a seven-night stay adds only about $14 per night. Short-stay guests are disproportionately affected by cleaning fees, which is one reason Airbnb data shows the nightly rate for a seven-night stay is 32% cheaper than a one-night stay when cleaning fees are factored in.
For hosts in markets with heavy short-stay traffic (urban weekend destinations, for example), a lower cleaning fee paired with a slightly higher nightly rate may perform better. For hosts in vacation markets where the average stay is five to seven nights, a moderate cleaning fee has less per-night impact and the standard 25% to 50% of ADR guidance holds.
The hybrid approach (a modest visible cleaning fee with part of the cost embedded in the nightly rate) has gained traction among experienced operators, and it makes mathematical sense for properties where turnover costs are high but short stays are common. The goal is keeping the total displayed price competitive in search without absorbing the full cleaning cost into your rate, which compresses your margins on longer stays.
What This Means for STR Investors Running Revenue Projections
If you are modeling a potential STR acquisition, cleaning fee structure is not a line item you can estimate and forget. It directly affects occupancy, revenue, and guest satisfaction scores. Here is the framework I recommend:
Step 1: Know your actual cleaning cost. Get quotes from at least two professional cleaning services in the target market. For a 2-bedroom, expect $100 to $180 depending on the market. For a 4-bedroom, expect $200 to $350.
Step 2: Calculate your target ADR. Use StaySTRA’s analyzer to pull comparable ADR data for the market and property type. If comparable listings average $250/night, your cleaning fee sweet spot is $62 to $125.
Step 3: Model the fee’s impact on revenue. Do not assume higher fees mean higher revenue. The data shows otherwise. A $285 cleaning fee on a 4-bedroom that could command a $250 ADR puts you at 114% of ADR, well into the declining-returns territory where listings average only $44,493/year. Pulling that fee down to $100 (40% of ADR) could lift your annual revenue toward the $64,405 range.
Step 4: Monitor and adjust. Track your booking conversion rate and value rating score for 60 to 90 days after any fee change. If your value rating drops below 4.7, your fee may be too high relative to guest expectations in your market.
For deeper market-level revenue benchmarks, our breakdown of what ski, beach, urban, and rural markets actually earn provides the ADR context you need to calibrate your cleaning fee to the right range. And if you are using dynamic pricing tools, make sure your cleaning fee strategy is coordinated with your rate management approach so one does not undercut the other.
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The Superhost Signal
One last data point worth sitting with. Among Airbnb Superhosts (hosts with 4.8+ ratings, 90%+ response rates, and consistent booking volume), 89% charge a cleaning fee. Superhost listings with fees earn an average of $60,995 per year compared to $33,879 for Superhosts without fees. Both groups maintain an average 4.90 rating.
That tells you something important: the best-performing hosts on the platform have figured out that a well-calibrated cleaning fee is not a guest deterrent. It is a revenue tool. The fee itself is not the problem. The wrong fee is the problem.
We do our best to keep our data accurate and up to date, but markets move fast and we are only human. Always verify current figures directly with local sources before making investment decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average Airbnb cleaning fee in 2026?
The US average is $188, but the median is $75. Fees vary significantly by property size: studios average $83, 2-bedrooms average $156, and 4-bedrooms average $285. The wide gap between mean and median reflects a small number of large or luxury properties with very high fees pulling the average up.
Should I include my cleaning fee in my nightly rate or charge it separately?
The data favors charging a separate cleaning fee in the 25% to 50% of ADR range. Listings in that bracket earn 72% more annually than no-fee listings. While Airbnb now shows total price in search, a moderate itemized fee still outperforms a fully bundled approach in most markets.
How do cleaning fees affect my Airbnb search ranking?
Cleaning fees affect your value rating, which influences search placement. Every $52 increase in cleaning fee makes a listing 13% less likely to score 4.8 or above on the value rating. Listings without fees get slightly more first-page impressions (48% vs. 44%), but they earn substantially less revenue overall.
Do higher cleaning fees result in better cleanliness ratings?
No. Research shows virtually no correlation between cleaning fee amounts and guest cleanliness ratings. Listings charging $31 and listings charging $255 both averaged between 4.74 and 4.77 on Airbnb’s cleanliness score. The quality of cleaning, not the price of it, determines the rating.
What cleaning fee should I charge for a 3-bedroom vacation rental?
The national average for a 3-bedroom is $210, but the optimal fee depends on your ADR. If your average nightly rate is $250, the data-backed sweet spot is $62 to $125 (25% to 50% of ADR). Use StaySTRA’s analyzer to pull comparable rates for your specific market and calibrate accordingly.
Run the Numbers for Your Market
Cleaning fee strategy only works when it is grounded in real market data. StaySTRA’s free analyzer gives you ADR, occupancy, and revenue benchmarks for any US market so you can set your cleaning fee in the range that maximizes total return, not the range that feels right.
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