Your listing photos do more for your bookings than almost anything else — they're what a guest judges before they read a word, the difference between a click and a scroll-past. A beautifully renovated unit with mediocre photos underperforms a plain one shot well. After photographing every unit we run, here are the Airbnb photography tips that make a listing sell itself.
Shoot in Good Light
Light is everything in listing photos. Shoot during the day when natural light is good and even, avoiding harsh midday glare and gloomy evenings. Bright, naturally lit rooms photograph as open and inviting; dark rooms photograph as small and grim, no matter how nice they are. Time your shoot for when each room gets its best daylight.
Turn the Warm Lights On
Here's the tip most hosts miss: turn on all the warm lamps and sconces, even in daylight. Warm pendants and lamps glowing in the photo make a room look cozy, lived-in, and inviting, conveying the warmth of the actual stay. Rooms shot in flat daylight alone look sterile; the same rooms with warm lights on look like somewhere you want to be. It's the simplest way to make photos feel welcoming.
Stage Every Room
Style each room before you shoot — make the bed crisply, clear and tidy every surface, fluff the cushions, set out a few simple props (a coffee setup, a plant, folded throws), and remove anything cluttered or personal. Staging is what separates a snapshot from a listing photo. A tidy, styled, warm room photographs as a cared-for home; a real-life messy one loses bookings.
Compose for Space
Shoot from the corners of a room at roughly chest height, which captures the most space and gives a natural sense of the room's size and flow. Keep the camera level so walls stay straight. Corner shots at mid-height make rooms look larger and more inviting than shooting straight-on or from standing height, which can distort or shrink a space.
Lead With Your Hero Image
The first photo — the hero image guests see in search — earns the click, so it has to be your strongest. Usually that's the living room or the most impressive, warm, inviting space, shot beautifully with warm light on and the room staged. Put real effort into the hero image; it does more for your click-through and bookings than any other single photo in the set.
Tell the Whole Story
After the hero, photograph every room and every selling point in a logical order, so a guest scrolling builds a complete, reassuring picture of the stay — the bedroom, the kitchen, the bathroom, the workspace, the view, the welcome details. A thorough, well-ordered photo set answers a guest's questions before they ask, which builds the confidence to book.
Edit Lightly and Honestly
Edit photos to look bright, warm, and true — adjust exposure and warmth so rooms look their best, but don't distort the space or misrepresent the unit, which leads to disappointed guests and bad reviews. The goal is photos that show the rental at its genuine best, warm and inviting, not photos that overpromise. Honest, beautiful, warm images set up a five-star stay.
Why It's the Highest-Return Work
Listing photos are the main thing guests judge before booking, so the hours you spend lighting, staging, and shooting them well pay back directly in clicks and bookings — often more than expensive renovation does. Warm light on, rooms staged, shot bright from the corners, led by a strong hero image: that's the formula for photos that turn a browser into a booking.
Shop this post: warm pendant lighting and table lamps for the living room
Our friend Sarah at The Kinney Home shoots warm, inviting room photos for a living — her natural-light approach is exactly what we lean on when we photograph a listing.


