Key Takeaways
- VRBO charges hosts 8% per booking (5% commission plus 3% payment processing). The annual subscription plan was discontinued for new hosts in 2025. Pay-per-booking is your only option if you are starting today.
- VRBO guests average 5 to 7 nights per stay compared to 3 to 5 nights on Airbnb. That longer booking means more revenue per calendar slot and fewer turnovers per month.
- Getting a VRBO listing live requires 6 core fields: property address, contact information, listing headline, listing description, property type, and bedroom/bathroom configuration.
- Enabling Instant Book gives your listing a direct search ranking boost on VRBO and a lightning bolt icon in search results. Hosts using Instant Book see roughly 35% higher conversion rates.
- iCal calendar sync with Airbnb has a 15-minute to 4-hour update delay. A channel manager eliminates that gap with real-time API connections and is worth it once you have two or more properties listed on both platforms.
VRBO guests book an average of 5 to 7 nights per stay. Airbnb guests average 3 to 5. That gap is not academic. For a property priced at $250 a night, the difference between a 3-night Airbnb booking and a 6-night VRBO booking is $750 in revenue from the same property and the same calendar slot. Hosts who already operate on Airbnb and added VRBO in the past two years are reporting 20 to 40 percent incremental revenue without purchasing any additional property. That math is too good to leave on the table.
The next wave of platform strategy for STR operators is not about picking between Airbnb and VRBO. It is about running both at once and understanding what makes each one perform. This guide covers the complete operational setup for getting your VRBO listing live in 2026, from account creation through your first booking, including the algorithm differences from Airbnb, how host fees work now that the subscription model is gone, what the traveler service fee means for your guests, and exactly how to sync your calendars without a double-booking disaster.
Who This Guide Is For
This guide is written for hosts who already operate on Airbnb and want to add VRBO as a second distribution channel. If you have a whole-home property, a property with 3 or more bedrooms, or a property in a beach, mountain, lake, or family destination market, VRBO is a natural fit for your existing inventory. One thing to know before you start: VRBO only allows whole-home listings. If you rent a private room or shared space on Airbnb, you cannot replicate that listing type on VRBO. Whole-home only, every time.
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What VRBO Guests Want That Airbnb Guests Don’t
The two platforms serve different traveler audiences. Understanding the difference tells you immediately how to position your property on VRBO and what to emphasize that you might not emphasize on Airbnb.
VRBO’s core audience is families, multi-generational groups, and groups of adults traveling together. The typical VRBO guest is 35 to 55 years old, traveling with at least one other person, and booking a week or more in advance. These guests prioritize sleeping capacity, kitchen access, and space for the whole group. They cook most of their meals, spend most of their time at the property, and care deeply about exactly how many people can sleep comfortably and where. A party of 8 needs to know whether those 4 bedrooms have 2 kings and 4 queens or 3 queens and 4 twin bunk beds. That detail matters more on VRBO than it does on Airbnb.
Airbnb’s typical guest skews younger, often traveling alone or as a couple, and looking for urban experiences or unique design. They care about walkability, local recommendations, and a space that photographs well. A chic studio in a walkable neighborhood performs better on Airbnb. A 4-bedroom beach house with a private pool and outdoor kitchen performs better on VRBO.
What to emphasize in your VRBO listing that matters more than on Airbnb:
- Sleeping capacity and bed configuration in every bedroom (list the exact bed type and count per room)
- Kitchen equipment in detail (VRBO guests cook most meals, so full appliances, cookware, and counter space matter)
- Parking for multiple vehicles (groups arrive in multiple cars)
- Outdoor space, grills, hot tubs, and pools
- Square footage and the actual layout (not just “spacious”)
- Proximity to family-friendly activities, beach access points, or the specific outdoor attraction driving the trip
What matters less on VRBO than on Airbnb: walk score, transit access, coffee shop proximity, unique interior design. Give VRBO guests the specs. Give Airbnb guests the story.
How to List on VRBO: Step-by-Step Setup
VRBO requires 6 core fields before your listing can go live. Most hosts complete the full setup in 30 to 60 minutes once their photos and property details are ready.
Step 1: Create Your Vrbo Host Account
Go to vrbo.com and click “List your property” in the top navigation. If you have an existing Expedia account, sign in with that credential. VRBO, Expedia, and Hotels.com are all part of Expedia Group, so the same login works across all three. If you do not have an Expedia account, create a new one using the email address you check most frequently. VRBO sends reservation notifications, inquiry alerts, and payment confirmations to that address. Missing a reservation notification costs you bookings.
One account handles multiple properties. If you plan to add more listings later, set up your account with that in mind now. VRBO’s host dashboard organizes all your properties in one view and applies the same fee structure across all of them.
Step 2: Enter the 6 Required Fields
VRBO’s listing creation wizard walks you through the six required fields in sequence:
1. Property address. Your exact street address. VRBO shows guests an approximate location until a booking is confirmed. Once a reservation is made, the exact address appears in the booking confirmation.
2. Contact information. The email and phone number for reservation communications. This does not have to match your public-facing contact information, but it must be a working channel VRBO can use to reach you reliably.
3. Listing headline. Minimum 20 characters, maximum 40 characters. This is what guests see in search results before clicking. Lead with the property type and primary selling point. “4BR Gulf-Front Home with Private Pool” outperforms “Beautiful Waterfront Retreat.” Be specific and accurate.
4. Listing description. Minimum 400 characters, maximum 10,000 characters. Organize it in clear sections: the property overview, the space itself, what makes it unique, the neighborhood, guest access, and important house rules. Front-load the key specifications. VRBO guests skim for numbers first (4 bedrooms, 3 baths, sleeps 10, 2,400 square feet) before reading the narrative.
5. Property type. Select from VRBO’s taxonomy: house, cabin, condo, villa, cottage, lake house, boat, and others. All must be whole-home rentals. No private rooms or shared spaces.
6. Bedroom and bathroom count. Each bedroom must be configured individually with the bed type and count. List every sleeping surface: king, queen, two twins, sleeper sofa, air mattress if included. VRBO guests use bedroom configuration to decide if your property fits their group before they ever read the description. Get this right.
Step 3: Upload Your Photos
VRBO requires a minimum of 6 photos. The practical minimum to compete is 25 to 35. VRBO’s internal research shows listings with 24 or more photos receive roughly 45 percent more inquiries than listings with fewer. Photo quality and quantity are direct ranking signals in VRBO’s search algorithm.
The first photo carries the most weight. It appears in search result thumbnails. Use the most visually compelling shot you have, typically the exterior or the main living area. The recommended sequence: exterior, main living area, kitchen, primary bedroom, primary bathroom, outdoor space, additional bedrooms in order of size, additional bathrooms, unique amenities. Caption every photo. Captions add text content to the listing and help guests understand the layout.
Step 4: Configure Pricing and Fees
Set your base nightly rate, weekend rate, and any minimum stay requirement. Optional: weekly and monthly discounts for longer bookings.
The cleaning fee is a separate line item on VRBO. Cleaning fees are included in VRBO’s 8% host commission calculation, which differs from Airbnb’s handling. If your nightly rate is $200 and your cleaning fee is $150 for a 3-night stay, VRBO’s 8% commission applies to the $600 in nightly revenue plus the $150 cleaning fee, totaling $750 subject to commission.
Pet fees, late checkout fees, and additional guest fees can all be configured here. VRBO integrates with PriceLabs, Wheelhouse, and Beyond via API if you use dynamic pricing tools. If you are already running a dynamic pricing tool on Airbnb, check whether it supports VRBO integration before setting manual rates. Most major tools do, and using the same tool across both platforms keeps your rate logic consistent.
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Step 5: Set Your Availability Calendar
Configure your calendar before going live. Block any personal use dates, maintenance windows, or turnaround days you need between bookings. Set your advance notice requirement and your minimum and maximum stay lengths.
Minimum stay settings matter more on VRBO than on Airbnb because VRBO guests default to week-long stays. A strict 7-night minimum eliminates shoulder-season and midweek bookings that fill calendar gaps. A 3-night minimum tends to generate the highest revenue per available day for most property types in vacation markets. StaySTRA data on minimum stay strategies shows a clear revenue gap between 1-night, 3-night, and 7-night minimums across different market types. You can dig into that data in our minimum stay revenue analysis.
Step 6: Choose Your Booking Type
VRBO offers two booking modes:
Instant Book: Guests book immediately without host review. VRBO’s algorithm gives Instant Book listings a direct search ranking boost, plus a lightning bolt icon in search results that increases click-through rates. Expedia Group data shows Instant Book listings average roughly 35 percent higher conversion rates than request-to-book listings. If you already use Instant Book on Airbnb, the transition here is straightforward. Your acceptance rate stays at 100 percent by default, which benefits both platforms’ ranking signals simultaneously.
Request to Book: Guests submit a request and you have 24 hours to accept or decline. This gives you review time before confirming. Some hosts in high-liability markets or with very high-value properties prefer this control. It costs search visibility. If you use Request to Book, a 90 percent or higher acceptance rate is the minimum threshold to avoid ranking penalties on VRBO.
Step 7: Set House Rules and Guest Requirements
Configure check-in and check-out times, pet policy, smoking policy, and event restrictions. VRBO allows family-friendly settings including children welcome designations, which actually helps with VRBO’s family-skewed audience.
Enable the rental agreement option. VRBO provides a default template, or you can upload your own. A signed rental agreement is your legal paper trail if a damage dispute or policy violation comes up. The guest electronically signs it when they confirm the booking. Always use it.
Step 8: Publish and Optimize After Go-Live
Once all required fields are complete, click Publish. Most listings are approved within 24 to 48 hours. After approval, your first optimization tasks:
- Complete all optional fields in your listing (neighborhood description, nearby attractions, check-in instructions, house manual)
- Upload your host profile photo and bio (listings with complete host profiles rank higher in search)
- Set your response time target (VRBO tracks and publicly displays your average response time)
- Connect your dynamic pricing tool if you use one
- Sync your Airbnb calendar using iCal or a channel manager (instructions below)
How VRBO’s Algorithm Ranks Listings
VRBO’s search algorithm shares some ranking factors with Airbnb’s and differs in others. Understanding what matters most helps you prioritize your optimization effort after go-live.
Photo quality and quantity. Listings with professional photos and 25 or more images consistently outrank comparable properties with fewer or lower-quality photos. This is true on Airbnb too, but VRBO’s photo weighting is particularly strong because VRBO guests spend more time evaluating photos before booking. The space has to sell itself before they click.
Review count and average rating. VRBO requires a minimum 4.0 rating to maintain full search visibility. Premier Host status (VRBO’s equivalent of Airbnb Superhost) requires a 4.6 or higher average and directly affects search ranking. Reviews need to be recent as well. A listing with 50 reviews from 3 years ago may rank lower than a listing with 12 reviews from the past 6 months.
Response rate and response time. VRBO displays your response rate and average response time publicly on your listing page. A 90 percent or higher response rate within 24 hours is the baseline to avoid ranking penalties. Faster is better. VRBO tracks responses to both inquiries and reservation requests separately, and both count.
Instant Book status. The ranking boost from Instant Book is more significant on VRBO than on Airbnb. VRBO’s Expedia Group infrastructure is built around predictable inventory, and Instant Book listings fit that model more cleanly than request-based listings do.
Listing completeness score. VRBO internally scores listings on a completion percentage. A listing with every optional field filled in, multiple amenity categories specified, and a full neighborhood description ranks above an identical listing with gaps. The algorithm treats completeness as a signal of a serious, engaged host.
One practical difference from Airbnb worth knowing: VRBO’s algorithm is more stable. Airbnb updates ranking factors frequently and individual listing positions can shift week to week. VRBO’s core ranking factors have been relatively consistent year over year, which means a well-optimized VRBO listing tends to hold its position longer once it earns it. That stability rewards the upfront setup work more durably.
For a full side-by-side comparison of how platform fee structures and revenue potential compare, see our Airbnb vs VRBO for Hosts guide.
VRBO Host Fees in 2026
I have spent time reading through Expedia Group’s platform documentation and host community forums on this topic, and the picture is clearer than the brief summary you will find on most sites. Here is what the fee structure actually looks like right now.
The VRBO annual subscription plan was discontinued for new hosts in 2025. The subscription previously cost approximately $499 to $699 per listing per year and eliminated the 5% commission in exchange for the annual upfront fee. Existing hosts with active subscriptions can renew them. If you are starting a new listing today, one fee model applies: pay-per-booking.
Pay-per-booking fee: 8% of the total booking amount
- 5% commission to VRBO/Expedia Group
- 3% payment processing fee
The 8% applies to nightly rates, cleaning fees, pet fees, and all mandatory charges. It does not apply to taxes or refundable security deposits. No annual commitment, no upfront cost.
Airbnb’s standard host-side fee is 3% in the split-fee model. VRBO’s 8% is higher. The comparison needs context though: VRBO guests pay their own separate traveler service fee at checkout. That fee comes on top of your listed nightly rate. Airbnb’s guest-side service fee works similarly. In practice, guests booking comparable properties on both platforms pay roughly similar all-in totals. What differs is the split between host fees and guest fees, not the total platform cost of the transaction.
The VRBO Traveler Service Fee
The traveler service fee is what your guests pay on top of your listed nightly rate and cleaning fee. VRBO uses a sliding scale based on the total reservation amount. The general range is 6% to 15%. Higher-value reservations carry a lower percentage. A $3,000 week-long booking might generate a 6% to 7% traveler fee. A $400 weekend booking might see a 13% to 15% traveler fee.
VRBO does not publicly disclose the exact formula for calculating the traveler fee. Guests see it only at checkout. Hosts cannot see the fee amount during listing setup or preview it before publishing. What matters operationally is that the traveler service fee appears as a separate, explicit line item on the guest’s checkout summary. Some guests comparison-shop their Airbnb and VRBO totals before booking and will see both service fees as separate line items on each platform.
One thing that sometimes confuses hosts: the traveler service fee and the host fee are completely separate. Your 8% comes out of your payout on the host end. The guest’s service fee is added on top of your prices on the guest end. These two fee streams do not interact. VRBO collects both, from both sides of the transaction.
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Syncing Your VRBO and Airbnb Calendars
Calendar sync is the most operationally critical piece of multi-platform hosting. A single double-booking costs you both the cancellation penalty and the guest relationship. Going forward, this will become even more important as booking windows compress and last-minute availability on multiple platforms becomes a performance factor. Here is how to set it up correctly.
iCal Sync (Free, With Known Limitations)
VRBO and Airbnb both support iCal format for calendar syncing. The process is bidirectional: export each platform’s calendar as an iCal URL and import it into the other.
To export your Airbnb calendar as an iCal link:
- Go to your Airbnb calendar and open “Availability settings”
- Scroll to “Sync calendars” and click “Export calendar”
- Copy the iCal URL Airbnb generates
To import that URL into VRBO:
- Go to your VRBO calendar settings
- Click “Import calendar” and paste the Airbnb iCal URL
- Name the imported calendar (use “Airbnb” so you can identify it later)
Then repeat in reverse: export your VRBO calendar as an iCal URL and import it into Airbnb. The bidirectional sync blocks dates on each platform when a booking comes in on the other.
The limitation you need to know about: iCal sync is not real-time. There is typically a 15-minute to 4-hour delay between when a booking appears on one platform and when the block shows up on the other. During high-demand periods or in fast-moving vacation markets, that delay window is long enough for a double-booking to occur. The free option has a real-world risk built into it.
Channel Manager (Recommended for High-Volume or Multi-Property Hosts)
A channel manager uses real-time API connections instead of iCal polling. When a booking comes in on Airbnb, the channel manager pushes the block to VRBO in seconds. Hostaway, Guesty, OwnerRez, Lodgify, and Beds24 all support both platforms. Setup takes a few hours. The sync from that point is automatic and near-instant.
For hosts running more than two properties or listing in markets with high same-day booking demand (beach towns, mountain destinations, World Cup and event markets), the channel manager monthly cost is insurance against cancellation fees. Most channel managers run $30 to $100 per month depending on property count. One avoided double-booking pays for a year of the tool.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to get a VRBO listing approved after publishing?
Most VRBO listings are reviewed and approved within 24 to 48 hours of publishing. VRBO’s review process checks for compliance with listing guidelines and content policies. In rare cases involving incomplete information or photos that do not meet their guidelines, review may take longer. You will receive an email notification when your listing goes live and is searchable.
Can I list on both VRBO and Airbnb at the same time?
Yes. Dual-listing on both platforms simultaneously is standard practice for whole-home STR operators. Most professional hosts run on both platforms. The calendar sync process (iCal or channel manager) handles double-booking prevention. There are no restrictions from either platform on operating a listing on the other platform at the same time.
Does VRBO require an STR permit or business license to list?
VRBO itself does not require a permit or license at the platform level before you can create a listing. But your city, county, or state almost certainly has STR permit requirements that apply to your property regardless of which platform you list on. VRBO’s listing setup includes a field for your permit or license number, which you should complete if your jurisdiction requires one. VRBO cooperates with local governments on data-sharing in many markets, so operating without a required permit creates real regulatory exposure.
What is VRBO Premier Host and how do I qualify?
VRBO Premier Host is VRBO’s recognition program for high-performing listings, equivalent to Airbnb Superhost. To qualify, each listing must maintain a 4.6 or higher average guest rating, a 90% or higher booking acceptance rate, a 1% or lower cancellation rate, and at least 3 completed reviews. As of January 2026, VRBO evaluates Premier Host status per listing rather than per account, so a multi-property host can have some Premier Host listings and some non-Premier listings. Premier Host status improves search ranking and adds a badge to your listing in results.
What is VRBO’s cancellation policy for hosts?
VRBO charges hosts a cancellation fee for host-initiated cancellations. The fee scales based on how close to the check-in date the cancellation occurs, and repeated cancellations can result in listing suppression in search or account suspension. VRBO’s host cancellation policies are stricter than Airbnb’s. If you need to cancel a booking, contact VRBO support before canceling to understand the specific penalty for your situation. Treating your VRBO calendar commitments seriously from day one is the cleanest path to maintaining standing on the platform.
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.
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