Key Takeaways
- Hosts using dynamic pricing tools earn 15 to 36 percent more revenue than those using flat rates or Airbnb Smart Pricing alone.
- Airbnb Smart Pricing optimizes for Airbnb’s booking volume, not your profit. It does not account for your costs, your market position, or multi-channel listings.
- PriceLabs, Wheelhouse, and Beyond each offer dynamic pricing with different fee structures. The right one depends on your property count, budget, and how much control you want.
- Your base price and floor price are the most important numbers you set. No algorithm can save you if those are wrong.
- Occupancy rate alone does not tell you if pricing is working. Revenue per available night (RevPAR) is the number that matters.
Hosts who switched to dynamic pricing in 2025 earned between 15 and 36 percent more revenue than hosts who kept flat rates. That gap is widening. In a market where projected RevPAR growth is under one percent for 2026, the way you price is no longer a minor optimization. It is the single biggest lever you have.
I spend a lot of time reading pricing tool documentation, algorithm research, and host forum data. What I keep seeing is this: most hosts are leaving real money on the table, and most of them do not know it. If you are still using Airbnb Smart Pricing as your main tool, or setting prices manually and hoping for the best, this guide is for you.
We are going to cover how pricing actually works, which tools do it best, how to set the numbers that every algorithm depends on, and what metrics tell you it is working.
Why Airbnb Smart Pricing Is Not Enough
Airbnb Smart Pricing is free, and it does something. It adjusts your nightly rate automatically based on demand signals within the Airbnb platform. For a brand-new host who does not want to think about pricing at all, it is better than nothing.
But it has a structural problem that most hosts do not realize until they dig into the numbers.
Airbnb wants bookings. More bookings mean more transaction fees for Airbnb. That incentive shapes how Smart Pricing works. It will push your rate down to fill calendar gaps, even when holding out for a higher rate would be the better financial decision for you.
Here is what else Smart Pricing cannot do:
- It cannot set seasonal floors. You get one minimum price for the entire year. You cannot say 150 dollar minimum in summer and 90 dollar minimum in the off-season.
- It does not see outside Airbnb. If you list on Vrbo, Booking.com, or your own direct booking site, Smart Pricing has no idea. It only sees Airbnb demand signals.
- It lags on local events. A college graduation weekend, a regional music festival, a sold-out conference. Smart Pricing often misses smaller demand spikes that a third-party tool would catch two to three weeks earlier.
- It does not combine cleanly with other pricing features. Weekend pricing rules, length-of-stay discounts, and gap-filling logic do not layer well with Smart Pricing active.
The result is that hosts using Smart Pricing alone consistently underperform hosts using third-party dynamic pricing tools in the same market. Multiple independent analyses back this up. Smart Pricing is a starting point, not a strategy.
The Three Pricing Approaches
Before you pick a tool, understand what type of pricing system you are building. There are three approaches, and each has a place.
Manual Pricing
You set the rate. You change it when you feel like it. For a single property in a very stable market with consistent demand, manual pricing can work. But only if you are actively watching comps and adjusting frequently. Most manual pricers do not. They set it once and move on, and that is where revenue quietly disappears.
Manual pricing makes sense when you are first learning your market, or when you have a very niche property where algorithm data is thin. It is not a long-term revenue strategy.
Rule-Based Pricing
You build a set of rules: raise prices 30 percent during holidays, drop 10 percent for last-minute bookings, charge a premium on weekends. Most property management systems and even Airbnb’s dashboard let you do some of this.
Rule-based pricing removes the worst manual pricing mistakes. But rules are static. They cannot react to a sudden surge in local demand or a competitor dropping their rates overnight. You are driving with a printed map instead of live navigation.
Dynamic Pricing
A machine learning algorithm, the kind of smart software that continuously learns from data, analyzes hundreds of signals in real time. Competitor rates, booking window, local events, historical occupancy, day-of-week demand patterns, cancellation data. It adjusts your rate automatically, sometimes multiple times per day.
This is where the 15 to 36 percent revenue lift comes from. The tools do the work that no human has time to do manually, and they do it around the clock. Dynamic pricing is appropriate for any host with seasonal demand, local events, or market competition. That is basically every property in every market.
PriceLabs vs Wheelhouse vs Beyond: Which Tool Is Right for You
These are the three major independent dynamic pricing platforms for short-term rental hosts in 2026. Each has different strengths, pricing models, and ideal use cases.
| Platform | Pricing Model | Cost (1 listing) | Free Trial | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PriceLabs | Per-listing flat fee | 19.99/month | 30 days | Hosts who want maximum control and customization |
| Wheelhouse | 1% revenue OR flat fee | 1% (min 2.99) or 19.99/mo | Free plan available | Hosts who prefer revenue-share or want a free entry point |
| Beyond | 1% of revenue | 1% of bookings/month | Free to start | Hosts who want zero upfront cost and simple setup |
PriceLabs
PriceLabs is the most widely used third-party pricing tool in the STR industry. Its algorithm pulls in a large volume of market data and gives you deep customization options: seasonal adjustment rules, last-minute discounts, gap-filling logic, orphan day pricing, and event overrides.
At 19.99 dollars per month for your first property, dropping to 9.99 dollars per month each for listings 2 through 9, it is one of the most cost-effective tools per listing. For a portfolio of 5 properties, that is under 60 dollars per month total. Compare that to the revenue most hosts recover in the first month of using it.
The Market Dashboard add-on (19.99 dollars per month) gives you aggregated data on how your market is performing. It is useful for calibrating your base price against real comps. The 30-day free trial lets you test it against your current setup before committing to anything.
The honest caveat: PriceLabs has a learning curve. It has a lot of settings, and getting it calibrated well takes a few weeks of active attention. The payoff is real, but go in expecting to invest time upfront.
Wheelhouse
Wheelhouse offers two main pricing structures. The Pro Flex plan charges 1% of revenue with a 2.99 dollar monthly minimum. The Pro Flat plan is 19.99 dollars per listing per month, discounted to 16.99 dollars each for 10 to 49 listings. A free plan also exists with limited dynamic pricing features.
Wheelhouse’s algorithm is strong, and its interface is cleaner than PriceLabs for hosts who do not want to dig into advanced settings. The revenue-share option is appealing when you are starting out and want to keep cash costs low. As your revenue grows, run the math: at some booking volume, the flat fee becomes cheaper than 1 percent.
The honest caveat: Billing on the 1% plan happens at time of reservation, which creates irregular monthly charges. If you prefer predictable costs, the flat fee plan gives you that stability.
Beyond
Beyond charges 1% of total booking revenue with no upfront fee or onboarding cost. It is the simplest on-ramp to dynamic pricing. Connect your listing, set your base price, and it starts adjusting rates immediately.
Beyond has strong data coverage for vacation rental markets and focuses on revenue optimization without requiring you to become a tool power-user. It is a good fit for hosts who want to stop managing pricing manually without learning a complex system from scratch.
The honest caveat: Less customization depth than PriceLabs. If you have a complex property or a niche market where standard algorithm data is thin, you may eventually want more control than Beyond provides.
The Short Answer on Tool Selection
For most hosts with 1 to 5 properties: start with PriceLabs or Wheelhouse. Both have free trial or free plan options. Run one for 30 to 60 days and compare your RevPAR against the previous period. The data will tell you what you need to know. Going forward, the tool comparison landscape keeps improving, and the gap between these three platforms is narrowing every year.
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How to Set Your Base Price Before You Trust Any Algorithm
Every dynamic pricing tool starts from your base price. This is the single most important number in your pricing setup. If it is wrong, the algorithm will be making wrong adjustments from a bad starting point. Even the best algorithm cannot fix a base price that is 40 dollars too low.
Your base price is not your peak season rate. It is not your average booking price from last year. It is the approximate nightly rate you would charge across the whole year if demand were completely flat year-round. Every nightly adjustment the algorithm makes is a percentage above or below this number.
Step 1: Find Your Market ADR Benchmark
Your target average daily rate is what comparable properties in your market actually earn. You need real market data for this, not guesswork. The StaySTRA Analyzer shows ADR benchmarks by market and property type. If comparable 2-bedroom beach houses in your area average 195 dollars per night, that is your starting reference point.
You can also research active competitor listings directly. Look at 10 to 15 properties that genuinely compete with yours: similar size, amenities, location tier. Study their calendars. Estimate their average rate across both booked and open nights. That gives you a real floor to work from.
Step 2: Establish Your Floor Price
Your floor price is the minimum you will accept on any night. It exists to prevent the algorithm from filling your calendar at rates that do not cover your costs. To set it correctly, you need your nightly break-even number.
Add up your fixed monthly costs: mortgage or rent, insurance, utilities, HOA fees, platform fees, property management, and ongoing supplies. Divide that total by the number of nights you expect to be occupied in a typical month. A conservative target is 60 to 70 percent occupancy, which is roughly 18 to 21 nights per month.
That calculation gives you your nightly break-even rate. Your floor price should be at or above that number.
Here is a simple example: A property with 3,000 dollars in monthly fixed costs at 65 percent occupancy (about 20 nights per month) needs 150 dollars per night to break even. If the market ADR for comparable properties is 220 dollars, set your base at 210 to 220 dollars and your floor at 150 dollars. The algorithm operates between those bounds and you are protected from filling nights at a loss.
Seasonality Strategy: Minimum Stays, Gap Days, and Holiday Windows
Dynamic pricing handles rate adjustments automatically. But the settings around minimum stays, gap days, and holiday pricing windows require intentional human decisions. These levers shape your calendar as much as the nightly rate does.
Minimum Stay Rules
A 2-night minimum blocks a lot of single-night impulse bookings during off-peak periods when you actually need occupancy. A 3-night minimum during peak season is standard in most vacation markets and protects you from high-turnover stress weekends.
The pattern that works for most hosts: 3-night minimum year-round, dropping to 2-night within 14 days of arrival if dates are still open. This fills gaps without opening the calendar to one-night party bookings during your busy season.
For holiday weekends in beach and mountain markets, a 4 or 5-night minimum is often worth it. Think Memorial Day, Labor Day, July 4th, Thanksgiving, and the Christmas-New Year stretch. Set those minimums 6 to 9 months out so you capture the early planners who book far ahead.
Gap Day Pricing
A gap day is a 1 or 2-night opening between two existing reservations. These are hard to fill at full price because most guests want longer stays. But leaving them empty is pure lost revenue.
The solution is orphan day logic. PriceLabs and Wheelhouse both have gap-filling rules that automatically discount nights within those narrow windows. A 25 to 35 percent discount on orphan days is typical. You fill the gap, capture revenue you would have lost, and the guest gets a deal on a shorter stay.
Turn on orphan day pricing in your tool settings. It requires no ongoing management and it adds revenue to your calendar all year without any extra work from you.
Holiday Pricing Windows
Holidays are the easiest pricing wins to miss. Most algorithms detect major demand spikes and raise rates. But the premium window is wider than most hosts realize.
For a major summer holiday like July 4th weekend: your premium pricing window starts about 90 days out for early bookers and stays elevated through the week of the event. Do not let the algorithm return to base rates too early just because you still have availability. Early bookers are not price-hunting. They are planning ahead and willing to pay for certainty.
Set custom event overrides in your pricing tool for the holidays that matter most in your market. A mountain ski town has a different holiday calendar than a beach market. Know your calendar and build it intentionally rather than relying on the algorithm to figure it out on its own.
How to Use StaySTRA Market Data to Set Your Pricing Targets
Here is where I see hosts make a consistent mistake: they set pricing targets based on gut feel or what a neighboring host charges. The problem is that neighbor might be pricing badly too.
Real calibration requires real market data. You need to know what your specific market type earns on average by bedroom count, what the seasonal curve looks like, and where your ADR falls relative to the market median. That context tells you whether you are under-pricing, over-pricing, or right in the zone.
The StaySTRA Analyzer shows ADR benchmarks by market and property type. Use it before you finalize your base price in any pricing tool. If comparable 2-bedrooms in your beach market median at 210 dollars ADR and you have been running at 165 dollars, the benchmark tells you something the algorithm cannot tell you on its own: you are underpriced relative to your competition.
For a view of how different market types perform across 12 months, the STR Revenue Benchmarks by Market Type 2026 report maps the seasonality curves for ski, beach, urban, and rural markets. That curve is what you are pricing against. A beach market with a 3-month summer spike prices very differently than an urban market with flatter year-round demand. Knowing your curve helps you build seasonal minimums that match actual demand patterns instead of guesswork.
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How to Know If Your Pricing Is Actually Working
The most common mistake after setting up dynamic pricing: hosts check occupancy rate and decide it is working or not working based on that number alone.
Occupancy rate is useful, but incomplete. A property can be 95 percent occupied and still be underperforming if nightly rates are too low. A property can be 60 percent occupied and be maximizing revenue if nightly rates are high enough to compensate for the open nights.
The number that tells you if pricing is working is revenue per available night, also called RevPAR. Calculate it simply: total monthly revenue divided by total nights in the month.
If your property earns 4,200 dollars in a 30-night month, your RevPAR is 140 dollars per night. If a comparable property in your market earns 4,800 dollars in the same month at 80 percent occupancy versus your 90 percent occupancy, they are getting 160 dollars RevPAR. Their pricing strategy is working better than yours, even though you are filling more nights.
Check your RevPAR monthly. Compare it against the market benchmark for your property type. If you are below the median, the fix is almost always one of three things:
- Base price is set too low
- Floor price is too low and the algorithm is filling nights that should stay open
- Minimum stay settings are forcing too many last-minute discounts
The STR Revenue Management guide covers the full framework professional hosts use to diagnose and fix RevPAR underperformance. For hosts ready to move beyond basic dynamic pricing into deeper revenue optimization, that is the next logical step.
Weekly Pricing Review: The Highest-ROI Task on Your Calendar
Dynamic pricing is not a set-it-and-forget-it system. The biggest revenue gains go to hosts who check their dashboard weekly. Look at upcoming 30-day pricing. Compare your rates to current comps. Adjust your base price seasonally as market conditions shift.
Hosts who actively review and adjust their settings weekly outperform passive users of the same tools by a measurable margin. Fifteen minutes per week is all it takes. Build it into your routine and it pays for itself many times over.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to use a dynamic pricing tool for Airbnb?
PriceLabs costs 19.99 dollars per month for your first listing, dropping to 9.99 dollars per month each for listings 2 through 9. Wheelhouse charges either 1% of revenue per month (minimum 2.99 dollars) or 19.99 dollars per listing flat. Beyond charges 1% of bookings per month with no upfront fee. For a single property, you are looking at roughly 20 dollars per month, which most hosts recover within the first one or two nights of improved pricing.
Should I turn off Airbnb Smart Pricing if I use PriceLabs or Wheelhouse?
Yes. When you connect a third-party pricing tool, it pushes prices directly to your Airbnb listing calendar. If Smart Pricing is also active, the two systems can conflict and create unpredictable rate changes. Airbnb recommends disabling Smart Pricing when using an integrated third-party tool. Turn it off during onboarding to your new tool to avoid that conflict.
How do I set the right base price for my Airbnb?
Your base price should reflect the average nightly rate comparable properties earn in your market across the full year. Start by checking ADR benchmarks for your market and property type using the StaySTRA Analyzer. Then look at 10 to 15 active competitor listings to calibrate your specific position. Set your base at or near the market median to start, then adjust upward as you track occupancy and RevPAR over the first 60 days.
What is the difference between base price and floor price?
Your base price is the average rate you would charge if demand were flat year-round. The dynamic pricing algorithm adjusts every night up or down as a percentage of that base. Your floor price is the minimum you will ever accept, regardless of what the algorithm recommends. Set your floor at or above your nightly break-even cost so the algorithm cannot fill nights at a loss.
How long does it take to see results from dynamic pricing?
Most hosts see measurable RevPAR improvement within 60 to 90 days of switching to a dynamic pricing tool. The first 30 days are primarily setup and calibration. Revenue gains accelerate as the algorithm collects more data about your property and market. Hosts who actively review and adjust their settings weekly see faster gains than passive users of the same tools.
We do our best to keep our tech reviews accurate and up to date, but products evolve fast and we are only human. Always verify current features and pricing directly with vendors before purchasing.
Ready to see where your pricing stands against your market? The StaySTRA Analyzer shows ADR benchmarks for your area so you can check your current rates against what comparable properties actually earn. It is free and takes about five minutes.
Also worth reading: the Must-Have Items for Airbnb Hosts in 2026 guide covers the physical setup and tech stack that supports everything pricing tools depend on, from smart locks enabling flexible check-in to noise monitors that protect your listing reputation.
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