A travel revolution in spare rooms and second homes or empty apartments. It's part of the sharing economy.
Alternative vacation accommodations to the soul-less, crummy, expensive hotels and chintzy or faded B&Bs.
Find out about them here!
2. What?
A travel revolution in spare rooms and second homes
or empty apartments.
Part of the sharing economy.
Alternative vacation accommodations to the soul-less,
crummy, expensive hotels and chintzy or faded B&Bs.
The cheapest is renting a room in someone’s home.
Pay more and get the whole place: an apartment or
whole house.
3. Why?
I hate hotels – they are smelly and impersonal. And
often expensive.
I hate B&Bs – they are smelly and too personal. I hate
having to be up at a certain time, breakfast in the
dining room, the awkwardness, the cheerfulness, the
bad coffee.
4. Who?
There are lots … and they are proliferating wildly. here
are four current industry ‘leaders’
AIRBNB: http://airbnb.com
FLIPKEY: http://flipkey.com
HOMEAWAY: http://homeaway.com
VRBO: http://vrbo.com
5. Creative retirement for some
Three years ago, retirees Lynne Martin, 73, and her husband Tim,
68, decided to live a "home-free" lifestyle in retirement. They
gave away most of their possessions, sold their house in Paso
Robles, Calif., found a new home for their dog and started
traveling the world. Since then, they've lived in furnished
apartments in Mexico, Argentina, Turkey, Paris, Italy, Great
Britain, Ireland, Morocco, Portugal and Germany. They are
regarded as senior gypsies who love the lifestyle because they
wanted to have the luxury of really getting to know the people, in
the countries they visit.
http://homefreeadventures.com/about/
6. Popular on airbnb (wishlists)
https://www.airbnb.com/wishlists/popular
unique/quirky/fabulous/fun – you name it!
tree houses/beach fronts
eco/go green/glamping
country cottages
lighthouses/castles/geodesic domes
https://www.airbnb.com/wishlists/stay-in-a-castle
7. Before you embark…
Make a list of what matters to you. Here’s mine in
order of importance:
Chemical-free cleaning
No plug ins/scented candles or pot-pourri
Private/quiet-ish/my own space/home from home
A kitchen
Good price
Quirky/fun/interesting or at the very least neutral
Interesting neighborhood
Pet friendly if I’m traveling with Ziggy
8. Some of mine – so far
West Palm Beach
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/1552731
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/1459342
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/1807519
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/565700
Washington DC
http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-
rental/reviews/p934371
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/626868
http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p313775
Long Beach
http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p901022
9. Read ALL the reviews
Really really read the reviews.
Listen to your instincts/gut feelings.
Read between all the lines.
Ask yourself – what are the review not saying?
10. Check the photos
Really really check the photos.
Too few is not good.
How old or accurate are they?
Which photos are missing and why?
What are the photos not showing?
11. Check out the owner
Really really check out the owner.
No photo of the owner or a bad photo is not good.
Little to no information is not good.
Check out the reviews of them as guests if there are
any (Airbnb).
Reviews give valuable info about owners.
12. Write to the Owner
Establish a relationship – to make sure there’s a
friendly/accessible/responsive person.
Ask for extra information/photos if needed.
Ask questions cleverly.
Ask difficult questions more cleverly.
13. Check policies
Each site has different policies regarding bookings and
fees and cancelations, plus there may be individual
host variations:
Payment…deposit or full payment…how and when?
Cleaning fee
Booking fee
Cancelation fees/refunds
14. Verification and $$$
Most big rental sites have a verification process for
hosts/owners. And sometimes for guests as well. It can
be confusing the first time you encounter it but this is
a Very Good Thing.
Never pay by check, wire transfer or cashier’s check.
Pay through the website using a payment method that
gives you recourse if things go awry i.e. a credit card.
15. Consumer reports
Renting someone else’s home, condo, or apartment, or swapping your
house with theirs is an appealing alternative to staying in hotels and
motels. But it appeals to scammers, too. They might, for instance,
solicit an advance payment for an imaginary property.
Or you might unwittingly rent a property in foreclosure just in time
for the bank to toss you out.
Sometimes the rip-off comes from a renter who boosts the price or
doesn’t deliver what was promised.
Or the property might be in New York City, where short-term rentals
are illegal.
Homeowners’ associations can also derail your dream vacation.
16. Consumer reports – cont.
Use a listing site such as Flipkey which conducts landlord
background checks and authenticates properties, or HomeAway
and VRBO, which provide a $10,000 rental guarantee (for $39)
that protects you against Internet fraud.
Check the legality of the rental and your protections by searching
the Internet for the town where you’re renting and terms such as
“tenant rights” and “short-term rentals.”
Use Zillow, Google Earth or Street View to check the property
resembles the pictures on the listing site and isn’t for sale.
Get the rental agreement in writing—and read the terms. Don’t
understand it? Have the landlord write an explanation
17. Cons from Nolo.com
http://bit.ly/1fZbX4w
Ads and descriptions may be misleading
Reservations on short-term rentals may take time
Some hosts are not so wonderful
Your short-term stay may not be legal
Your rental place may not be secure
Your options may be limited if something goes wrong
Reviews can be misleading
Hotel service or amenities are often missing
18. Pros & advice from Nolo.com
You can save money – sometimes a lot of money.
Some hosts are wonderful.
Some accommodations are fantastic. Way better than hotels
Whether you're staying in a large hotel or a room you found on
Airbnb, HomeAway, or a similar short-term rental service, do your
homework before booking. Check out as much information as you
can about the host, the accommodations, neighborhood,
amenities, all fees, and cancellation policies.
19. Check ‘amenities’ & ‘rules’
Be sure the property has what you are looking for.
Most places have wireless internet these days. And
cable TV. And A/C (south florida) or heating (northern
climes). But not all do.
Check the ‘house rules’ are reasonable, if you smoke
for example some places don’t allow you to smoke in
or even around the house.
20. Airbnb as of 2013/2014
A community marketplace where guests can book spaces
from hosts, connecting people who have space to spare
with those who are looking for a place to stay. Through
their experiences on Airbnb, guests and hosts build real
connections with real people from all over the globe.
10,000,000 guests
550,000 listings
33,000 cities
175 countries.
21. Flipkey as of 2013/2014
A leading vacation rental marketplace that makes it easy,
safe, and fun to find and book the perfect place to stay.
260,000 guests
300,000 listings
12,000 locations
79 countries
22. Homeaway and VRBO
VRBO is ‘powered’ (owned) by Homeaway ‘the world
leader in vacation rentals’
Homeaway has over 575,000 vacation properties
worldwide
It’s hard to get current data because the data is
changing so quickly – more guests, more properties,
more cities and countries.
24. A smorgasbord of articles
Each tells a different ‘story’ about Airbnb and/or the
‘industry’ from the financial to the historical to personal
accounts (rosy ¬ so much) & the New York situation.
2012 USA Today: http://usat.ly/1fWVRbq
Sept 2013 Guardian UK: http://bit.ly/1kNvGRE
2013 First Round: http://bit.ly/1fWXkyv
April 2014 Slate: http://slate.me/SBQsME
May 2013 NYT: http://nyti.ms/1ittfW6
July 2013 Blog: http://bit.ly/Rt1B1x
May 2014 Forbes: http://onforb.es/1iZ3VbZ
25. Other sites for rentals
https://www.couchsurfing.org/ imagine!
http://www.housetrip.com airbnb wannabe
http://www.rentmix.com rental site
http://www.vamoose.com another rental site
http://www.sloweurope.com/ euro rentals
http://www.homeaway.co.uk/ euro homeaway
Pet friendly
http://www.petvr.com/ = vrbo
http://www.bringfido.com/ = homeaway
26. Reviews of websites
http://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.flipkey.com
http://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.airbnb.com
http://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.homeaway.com
http://www.yelp.com/biz/vrbo-vacation-rentals-by-
owners-from-home-away-aurora
Reliability? Reading some of these made me wonder if
competitors are posting negative reviews?