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Hosting tips, design ideas, and STR insights.
Marketing
Write a Listing Description That Converts
April 22, 2026
A listing description that converts opens with a property-specific hook in the first 150 characters, paints the stay experience over the inventory, and closes with honest logistics that preempt objections. Identical-looking properties at similar price points often book at very different rates based on the first 150 characters of the description. That's how much real estate you actually have on a mobile device, and most hosts spend it poorly. ##LABEL: Lead With a Hook ##HEADING: Open your STR listing description with a specific hook On the Airbnb and Vrbo mobile apps, guests see roughly 150 characters of description before tapping "read more." If those two sentences don't pull them in, the rest of the description never gets read. ##QUOTE: The first 150 characters of a listing description do more work than the next thousand combined. Skip generic openers like "Welcome to our beautiful home" or "You'll love this cozy retreat." Those sentences appear in tens of thousands of listings and register as wallpaper. Open with a concrete detail that tells the guest exactly who this property is for. "Wake up to Intracoastal views from a king bed, then walk two blocks to the best breakfast on the island" puts the reader in the stay in twenty-two words. "Our lovely 2-bedroom condo is perfect for families and couples" says nothing and applies to half the listings on the platform. ##LABEL: Sell the Stay ##HEADING: Write listing description copy that sells the stay After the hook, spend the middle of the description describing what the stay actually feels like. Walk the reader through it: the morning coffee on the deck, the living room where everyone ends up after dinner, the 90-second walk to the corner taco counter. Sensory detail outperforms abstract description at every price tier. Here's an unpopular position. Most listing guides tell hosts to list nearby tourist attractions and landmarks. Skip the landmarks list. Name real restaurants, coffee shops, and bars instead. "Four blocks from Tartine Manufactory" outperforms "close to Mission District attractions." "A 90-second walk to Anchor Oyster Bar" outperforms "near famous SF seafood." Specific local names signal that the host actually lives the neighborhood, which is a quiet trust signal guests pick up immediately. Drop the adjective stacks. "Beautiful, cozy, charming, luxurious" means nothing when every listing uses the same four words. Replace them with proof: the Coyuchi sheets, the Breville espresso machine, the record player next to the couch. A listing naming specific brands and tangible details reads as a different category of property than one promising "luxury finishes." ##LABEL: Close With Logistics ##HEADING: Close your STR listing description with honest logistics The final third handles the practical details: parking, check-in flow, neighborhood quirks, known constraints. Guests researching a booking are silently building a list of objections, and the description's job is to answer them before they become reasons to scroll past. Be upfront about constraints. If the property has three flights of stairs, say so. If you enforce a strict no-parties rule, state it. If the neighborhood gets loud on weekends, name it. Hosts who hide issues get the one-star reviews that describe them anyway. Hosts who disclose them attract guests who are a fit and preempt the ones who aren't. Close with a prompt that references real demand: "Our calendar moves fast in April and October, so if your dates are open they probably won't stay that way" reads better than "Book now." The first implies demand the guest can verify on the calendar. The second triggers the same skepticism as a used-car pitch. A strong listing description earns the booking your photos opened the door for. Furnishr designs and furnishes complete short-term rentals in a single day across the US and Canada, working from a deep network of suppliers including Four Hands, Article, and Loloi Rugs to give every property something specific worth describing. ##TAGS: Marketing, Guest experience, Photography
Amenities
The Top Amenities Guests Search For
April 22, 2026
The top amenities STR guests filter for in 2026 are reliable Wi-Fi, central air conditioning, free parking, a proper workspace, and a fully stocked kitchen that actually functions. Understanding what travelers filter on, versus what hosts assume they care about, is how a property ends up booked at premium rates instead of competing on discount. Amenity strategy separates strong-occupancy properties from weak ones more reliably than design budget alone. ##LABEL: The Non-Negotiables ##HEADING: The STR amenities guests filter for first A common launch mistake is listing Wi-Fi speeds that have never been tested. It only takes one guest leaving a three-star review citing slow speeds for the listing's ranking to drop. The fix takes two minutes: run a speed test on the router, and if you're under 100 Mbps, call your provider and upgrade. Post the actual speed in your listing. 100 Mbps or higher reads as serious. Anything below 50 reads as a gamble. Central AC is the next filter, especially in any market that sees 80°F for more than six weeks a year. A property without AC in Texas or Florida loses bookings no matter how good the photos look. Free parking is the third filter, and it cuts search visibility if you miss it. Even in transit-friendly cities, guests with luggage or kids want to know where the car goes. ##QUOTE: Guests don't book the listing with the longest amenity list, they book the one where the essentials are clearly handled and a few details feel intentional. ##LABEL: The Convincers ##HEADING: Secondary STR amenities that tip booking decisions A dedicated workspace has become a top-five search filter in the last three years. That means a real desk, an ergonomic chair that holds up to an eight-hour workday, task lighting, and two power outlets within reach. Business travelers and remote workers screen specifically for this and many book on it alone. A fully stocked kitchen matters more than most hosts realize. Not just the pots, but the details: a sharp chef's knife, a decent cutting board, a pepper grinder that actually works, a French press for guests who want coffee without the machine. Guests on stays of three nights or more cook at least one meal almost every time. In-unit laundry, a smart TV with the major streaming apps, and a bathtub for family-friendly properties all move the needle. Missing any of these in a competitive market commonly costs 10 to 15 percent of eligible bookings. ##LABEL: The Differentiators ##HEADING: Premium STR amenities that justify higher nightly rates Here's where common advice goes wrong. Every STR guide tells hosts to put a Nespresso machine in the kitchen. A good drip maker with a burr grinder is the better call. Half your guests don't own pod machines at home and aren't buying a sleeve of pods for a two-night stay. A $60 drip maker, a $90 grinder, and a bag of local roaster beans reads as hospitality. A crusted-over Nespresso reads as an afterthought. Outdoor space punches above its weight in listing photos. A patio with two chairs, a side table, and three potted plants becomes a usable amenity in search results. A grill, string lights, and a fire pit can turn a generic backyard into a booking driver. In leisure markets, outdoor dining for six is worth adding because families and groups filter for it by name. A property with 35 thoughtful amenities beats one with 60 random ones in almost every comparison. Hosts who sweat the details in the listing typically sweat them in the cleaning and the communication too, and guests pick up on that within the first few minutes of a stay. Amenity strategy works when the space is designed to showcase each feature in listing photos and during the stay. Furnishr designs and installs complete short-term rentals in a single day, with the right amenities placed and styled to convert in search results from day one. ##TAGS: Amenities, Guest experience, Design