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What We Learned From Our First 100 Guests
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What We Learned From Our First 100 Guests

A hundred guests is a lot of feedback — a hundred sets of expectations, habits, and honest reactions to the spaces we'd built. By the time we'd hosted our first hundred, the patterns were impossible to ignore, and a lot of our assumptions had been quietly corrected. Here's what our first 100 guests actually taught us about what matters in a short-term rental.

The Fundamentals, Confirmed

The clearest lesson was that the fundamentals matter most, every time. Across a hundred stays, what guests rewarded was consistent: cleanliness, a comfortable bed, easy arrival, reliable wifi, an honest listing, and warm lighting. The clever extras we'd agonized over mattered far less than getting the basics reliably right. A hundred guests confirmed: nail the fundamentals and the rest is upside.

Sleep Above All

Nothing showed up in reviews more than sleep. Guests praised a good night's rest and punished a poor one, and the bed, the blackout curtains, and the quiet drove it. We upgraded a mattress after early feedback and watched the bedroom comments turn glowing. If a hundred guests taught us one thing, it's that you cannot over-invest in sleep. It's the heart of the whole experience.

Lighting Got Noticed

We were almost surprised how often guests mentioned the lighting — warmly. Comments about how cozy or welcoming a space felt traced straight back to the warm, layered light from lamps, bedside sconces, and plug-in fixtures. Guests don't always name the lighting, but they feel it, and it colours their whole impression. A hundred guests confirmed warm light is a five-star ingredient.

The Small Things Get Reviewed

Guests consistently mentioned small details — the good coffee, the quality towels, the thoughtful extra they didn't expect to find, the easy check-in. These touches cost little but landed big, showing up by name in our best reviews. A hundred guests taught us that thoughtfulness is visible: the small details signal care, and care is what guests reward most generously.

Complaints Were About Basics

Tellingly, almost every complaint we received was about a fundamental, not a luxury — a cleanliness slip, a wifi hiccup, a missing basic, a confusing instruction. Guests rarely wished for something fancier; they wished the basics had been handled. That reframed our priorities: most negative feedback is preventable with good systems and attention to fundamentals, not with more spending on extras.

Honesty Pays

The stays that went best were the ones where reality matched or beat the listing. When we described and photographed honestly, guests arrived happy and left happier. The few times something oversold, even slightly, we felt it in the review. A hundred guests reinforced that accuracy and honest expectations are the foundation of satisfaction — under-promise, over-deliver, every time.

Feedback Compounds

The most valuable thing about a hundred guests was the feedback itself. We treated every review and comment as product input, fixed recurring problems fast, and watched the listing improve steadily. The compounding effect of many small fixes — a clearer instruction here, a better pillow there — is what turned a decent rental into a consistently five-star one. Guests are your best product team.

What We'd Tell a New Host

If we could hand our first-day selves one note, it would be this: your guests will tell you exactly what matters, and it's almost always the fundamentals done well — clean, comfortable, warmly lit, honestly represented, and warmly communicated. Build for those, listen hard to the feedback, and a hundred guests will turn a new listing into a reliable, well-loved rental.

Our friend Karen at The Holloway Home writes about living-room comfort with the same listen-to-how-people-actually-use-it instinct that our guests taught us.

Frequently Asked Questions

What do Airbnb guests care about most?

Guests care most about cleanliness, a comfortable bed and good sleep, warm and easy arrival, reliable wifi, accurate listings, and clear communication. After a hundred guests, the pattern is consistent: they reward the fundamentals done well and forgive a lot when a place is clean, comfortable, well-lit, and honestly represented.

What do guests complain about in short-term rentals?

The most common complaints are cleanliness issues, uncomfortable beds, harsh or inadequate lighting, slow wifi, inaccurate listings, missing basics, and confusing check-in. Most complaints are about fundamentals and function rather than luxury, which means most are preventable with good systems, honest listings, and attention to comfort and lighting.

How do you use guest feedback to improve a rental?

Track recurring themes in reviews and messages, fix real problems quickly (a missing item, an unclear instruction, a too-firm pillow), and treat each stay as product feedback. Acting on patterns rather than one-off comments steadily improves the listing. The compounding effect of small fixes from real guest feedback is what builds a consistently five-star rental.

Do small details really matter to Airbnb guests?

Yes — guests notice and review small details like warm lighting, good coffee, quality towels, thoughtful extras, and easy arrival. These details signal care and lift a stay from fine to memorable. While the fundamentals come first, the small touches are often what guests specifically mention in their best reviews.

How many reviews do you need to succeed on Airbnb?

There's no fixed number, but steady positive reviews build the trust and ranking that drive bookings, and the first dozen or so matter most for momentum. Focusing on delivering genuine five-star stays from the start — clean, comfortable, warmly lit, well-communicated — builds the review base that makes a listing succeed over time.

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