Occupancy rate is the heartbeat of a vacation rental — it tells you how often your property is actually earning, and it's the first number to fix when income disappoints. Airbnb occupancy rate is the percentage of available nights that are booked over a given period, calculated by dividing booked nights by available nights. At Awning, we manage 20,000+ vacation rental properties across all 50 states, and improving occupancy is one of the highest-leverage moves an underperforming listing can make.
This guide shows you exactly how to calculate occupancy, what counts as a good rate, why occupancy alone can mislead you, and the proven tactics that raise it.
In this guide:
- How to calculate Airbnb occupancy rate
- What is a good occupancy rate?
- Why occupancy isn't the whole story
- How to improve your occupancy rate
- Frequently asked questions
How to Calculate Airbnb Occupancy Rate
Airbnb occupancy rate is calculated by dividing the number of booked nights by the number of available nights, then multiplying by 100. The formula is simple: Occupancy Rate = (Booked Nights ÷ Available Nights) × 100.
For example, if your property was booked 18 nights in a 30-day month and available the whole time, your occupancy rate is (18 ÷ 30) × 100 = 60%. The critical detail is how you count "available nights" — if you block dates for personal use or maintenance, exclude them from the available total, or your rate will look artificially low. Track occupancy monthly and seasonally rather than as a single annual figure, since vacation rental demand swings throughout the year. To benchmark your property against its earning potential, pair this with the Airbnb income calculator and a market revenue estimate.
What Is a Good Airbnb Occupancy Rate?
A good Airbnb occupancy rate generally falls between 50% and 70%, though the right target varies widely by market, season, and property type. Top-performing listings in strong markets often exceed 70%, while seasonal vacation markets may see high peak occupancy and low off-season occupancy that average out lower.
The key is benchmarking against comparable listings in your specific market, not against a national number. A 55% occupancy rate might be excellent in a highly seasonal beach town and mediocre in a year-round urban market. Context matters more than the raw figure — which is why occupancy should always be read alongside your nightly rate, covered next.
Pro Tip: Don't chase 100% occupancy. A property booked every single night is almost always underpriced — you'd earn more by raising rates and accepting slightly lower occupancy. The goal is maximum revenue, not maximum nights booked.
Why Occupancy Isn't the Whole Story
High occupancy can actually signal a problem, because occupancy and nightly rate trade off against each other. The metric that captures both is RevPAR (Revenue Per Available Rental night) — your total revenue divided by available nights — which reflects how well you're balancing price and occupancy.
A property at 95% occupancy charging $100 a night earns less than one at 70% charging $180. That's why professional managers optimize for revenue, not occupancy alone: the aim is the highest sustainable RevPAR, found by pricing each night to demand rather than discounting to fill the calendar. Reading occupancy, nightly rate, and RevPAR together — the way full-service managers do — is what separates a busy listing from a profitable one.
How to Improve Your Airbnb Occupancy Rate
The fastest way to raise occupancy is to fix pricing and visibility, then improve the listing and guest experience. If your occupancy is below market, work through these levers in order:
- Use dynamic pricing. Adjust rates to demand, events, and seasonality so you're never overpriced on slow nights or underpriced on peak ones.
- Optimize the listing. Professional photos, an accurate, keyword-rich description, and complete details drive clicks and bookings — see our listing optimization guide.
- Add high-demand amenities. Filtered amenities keep you visible in more searches; missing ones remove you entirely.
- Loosen restrictive rules. Overly long minimum-night stays or rigid check-in windows quietly suppress bookings.
- Win the reviews game. Strong reviews and Superhost status raise both ranking and conversion.
- Respond fast. Quick responses to inquiries improve ranking and capture bookings before guests choose a competitor.
- Capture off-season demand. Consider mid-term rentals to fill slow periods with 30+ day stays.
Hosts who want all of these handled — pricing, listing, amenities, and reviews — can hand the property to full-service management, which optimizes occupancy and revenue together.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you calculate Airbnb occupancy rate?
Divide booked nights by available nights and multiply by 100. For example, 18 booked nights out of 30 available equals 60% occupancy. Exclude nights you block for personal use or maintenance from the available-nights total so the figure stays accurate.
What is a good occupancy rate for Airbnb?
A good rate is generally 50% to 70%, with top listings in strong markets exceeding 70%. The right target depends heavily on your market, season, and property type, so benchmark against comparable local listings rather than a national average.
Is 100% occupancy good for an Airbnb?
Usually no. A property booked every night is almost always underpriced and would earn more at higher rates with slightly lower occupancy. Optimize for total revenue (RevPAR), not for filling every available night.
What is RevPAR for a vacation rental?
RevPAR, or Revenue Per Available Rental night, is total revenue divided by available nights. It combines occupancy and nightly rate into one figure, making it a better measure of performance than occupancy alone.
How can I increase my Airbnb occupancy rate?
Use dynamic pricing, optimize your listing with professional photos and a complete description, add high-demand amenities, loosen overly restrictive rules, build strong reviews, respond quickly to inquiries, and fill slow periods with mid-term stays.
Why is my Airbnb occupancy so low?
Common causes are pricing that's above market, a weak or incomplete listing, missing high-demand amenities, overly restrictive minimum-night or check-in rules, few reviews, or slow inquiry responses. Audit pricing and visibility first, since those move occupancy fastest.
Let Awning Handle Your Vacation Rental
Awning optimizes pricing, listings, amenities, and reviews together to maximize occupancy and revenue — across 20,000+ properties in all 50 states.


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