Every villa owner knows Airbnb charges a commission. Few know the actual number. Between host service fees, guest service fees, currency conversion margins, and the pricing pressure of sitting inside a marketplace that encourages rate-matching, the real cost of an Airbnb booking is almost always higher than the percentage on paper.
We built the calculator below to give you a clear, per-booking picture of what you're paying, and what you'd keep if even a fraction of those bookings came through your own website instead.
How Airbnb's Fee Structure Works
Airbnb offers two pricing models. The one you're on determines how much of each booking goes to the platform rather than to you.
Split-Fee Model (Most Common in Europe)
Under the split-fee model, Airbnb charges the host 3% of the booking subtotal and charges the guest a separate service fee of roughly 14%. This is the default for most European listings.
The host sees a 3% deduction and considers it reasonable. But the guest is paying 14% more than your listed rate. That inflated total is what guests compare against other options, including hotel rates, other villas, and direct booking websites. Your competitive position in the market is shaped by a fee you don't control.
Host-Only Pricing
Under host-only pricing, Airbnb absorbs the guest service fee into a single 14-16% commission charged to the host. The guest sees no additional fee at checkout. This creates cleaner pricing for the guest, but the host feels the full weight of the commission directly.
The real number is 17-20%. Under the split-fee model, the combined platform take (host fee + guest fee) from the total booking value ranges from 17-20%. That's the number that matters when comparing Airbnb against direct bookings, because it represents the total friction cost the platform inserts between you and your guest.
What This Looks Like in Practice
The table below shows what Airbnb actually costs for villas at different price points, using the split-fee model.
| Nightly Rate | 7-Night Booking | Host Fee (3%) | Guest Fee (14%) | Total Platform Take |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 200 EUR | 1,400 EUR | 42 EUR | 196 EUR | 238 EUR |
| 350 EUR | 2,450 EUR | 74 EUR | 343 EUR | 417 EUR |
| 500 EUR | 3,500 EUR | 105 EUR | 490 EUR | 595 EUR |
| 800 EUR | 5,600 EUR | 168 EUR | 784 EUR | 952 EUR |
For a villa charging 500 EUR per night, a single week-long booking generates 595 EUR in platform fees. Across 15-20 bookings per season, that's 8,900-11,900 EUR per year leaving your revenue and going to Airbnb.
What Villa Owners Actually Pay Per Year
The annual cost depends on your rate, occupancy, and average stay length. Here are three representative scenarios for Mediterranean villa owners:
| Scenario | Annual Revenue | Annual Airbnb Fees | With 40% Direct |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-bed villa, shoulder season focus | 30,000 EUR | 5,100 EUR | Save 2,040 EUR/yr |
| 3-bed villa, strong high season | 55,000 EUR | 9,350 EUR | Save 3,740 EUR/yr |
| 5-bed luxury villa, full season | 110,000 EUR | 18,700 EUR | Save 7,480 EUR/yr |
The "40% direct" column assumes that within 12-18 months of launching a proper website, around four out of every ten bookings come through your own site instead of Airbnb. That's a conservative benchmark based on what we see with our own clients.
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Get My Site LiveWhy the Guest Fee Matters More Than You Think
Villa owners on the split-fee model often focus on their 3% host fee and consider it acceptable. But the 14% guest service fee has three indirect costs that are harder to see:
- Price comparison disadvantage. When a guest compares your Airbnb listing at 350 EUR/night (total: 399 EUR with fees) against a direct booking website showing 350 EUR/night with no markup, the direct site wins on price even though your underlying rate is identical.
- Rate ceiling pressure. Guests have mental price thresholds. The 14% fee pushes your total past those thresholds, which limits how high you can set your nightly rate.
- Repeat guest leakage. Guests who've stayed with you before still pay the 14% fee on Airbnb. Many would happily book direct if they could find your website, but without one, they default to the platform.
The Direct Booking Alternative
A direct booking website doesn't replace Airbnb overnight. It works alongside it. You keep your Airbnb listing for discovery and new guest acquisition, but you route repeat guests, referrals, and Google traffic to your own site where you keep 100% of the booking value.
The economics are straightforward: a properly built villa website costs a fraction of one year's commission fees and pays for itself within the first season if it captures even a small share of your bookings.
What a direct booking site needs to actually compete with Airbnb:
- Professional photography presented better than any platform template allows
- Multilingual pages so German, French, and Italian guests find you in their own language on Google
- Real SEO with schema markup, sitemaps, and hreflang tags so search engines index every language version
- A fast, mobile-first experience because 60%+ of holiday research happens on phones
- An enquiry form or booking integration that makes it as easy to contact you as clicking "Reserve" on Airbnb
Booking.com and Vrbo: How They Compare
Airbnb isn't the only platform taking a cut. Here's how the major OTAs compare for villa owners:
| Platform | Host Commission | Guest Fee | Total Take |
|---|---|---|---|
| Airbnb (split fee) | 3% | 14-16% | 17-19% |
| Airbnb (host-only) | 14-16% | 0% | 14-16% |
| Booking.com | 15-20% | 0% | 15-20% |
| Vrbo | 8% | 6-12% | 14-20% |
| Direct website | 0% | 0% | 0% |
Every major platform takes between 14-20% of the booking value. The only channel with zero ongoing commission is your own website.
Frequently Asked Questions
Under the split-fee model (default in Europe), Airbnb charges hosts 3% per booking. Under host-only pricing, the fee is 14-16%. The combined platform take including guest service fees ranges from 17-20% of total booking value.
Airbnb charges guests 14-16% on top of the listed nightly rate. For a 1,000 EUR booking, the guest pays an additional 140-160 EUR in service fees at checkout.
A villa earning 50,000 EUR per year through Airbnb loses roughly 8,500-10,000 EUR in combined fees. If 30-40% of bookings shift to direct over 12-18 months, that's 2,500-4,000 EUR saved annually, typically covering a professional website's cost in the first season.
The percentage is identical, but villas have higher nightly rates, so the absolute fee is much larger. A 3% host fee on a 500 EUR/night villa is 15 EUR per night, versus 3.60 EUR on a 120 EUR apartment. Over a season, that difference adds up to thousands.
The main alternatives are Booking.com (15-20% commission), Vrbo (8% host + guest fee), and your own direct booking website (0% commission, one-time build cost). A direct website is the only option that eliminates ongoing fees entirely.
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