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Search resuls for: "AirDNA"


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[1/3] Figurines are seen in front of the Airbnb logo in this illustration taken February 27, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File PhotoMEXICO CITY, Oct 26 (Reuters) - Mexico City's mayor said on Wednesday she wants to boost the number of 'digital nomads' in the capital after signing an agreement with short-term rental platform Airbnb, despite fears the influx is pricing residents out of the rental market. Average daily rates for short-term rentals across Mexico City jumped 27% to $93 in August 2022 compared with the same month in 2019, data from market research company AirDNA shows. Airbnb is also opening its platforms for Mexican residents to create tourism experiences around their daily activities, according to Sheinbaum. The partnership between Mexico City's government and Airbnb is also backed by UNESCO, United Nations' cultural agency.
COVID-19 sparked a boom in short-term rentals, and AirDNA found listings hit a record high in 2022. 18 cities across North America are looking to rein in Airbnbs and short-term rentals. From the beaches of California to the mountains of Vermont, communities are grappling with what the future of short-term rentals looks like. Some cities have simply called timeout: Chattanooga, Tennessee, paused new applications for non-owner-occupied units as it considered short-term rentals' future there. Here are 18 cities in the US and Canada where residents and local politicians are fighting back against short-term rentals.
Two startups that allow Americans to buy shares of overseas properties break down the process. Now Americans are showing more interest in Europe and other — relatively — cheaper spots abroad to buy pieds-à-terre and investment properties. Take Housie and Flyway, new startups that embrace a growing trend in real-estate investing: fractional ownership. HousieRight now, for a minimum of $100, users can buy shares of properties and receive dividends quarterly depending on how well the property does on the short-term market. Still in the preliminary stages, Flyway has sold some shares but the homes have yet to be rented out.
MEXICO CITY — In a trendy part of Mexico City, in a park surrounded by hipster coffeeshops and restaurants, stands a figure dressed in white with hands in prayer like a Catholic statuette: the so-called patron saint against gentrification. Nearly two million foreigners touched down at the Mexico City International Airport in the first half of 2022, inching toward the record 2.5 million arrivals in the first half of 2019. The gap between American and Mexican salaries means even affluent Mexico City residents can get priced out, in a city that is already home to wide wealth disparities. According to Mexico’s statistics agency, the top 10% of Mexico City households earned more than 13 times as much as the bottom 10% of households in 2020. Coronado, an architect and interior designer who lives between Los Angeles and Mexico City, said he understands locals are resentful.
COVID-19 sparked a boom in short-term rentals, and AirDNA found listings hit a record high in 2022. Some locals and officials in hot cities say they deplete housing stock or cause noise disturbances. 18 cities across North America are looking to rein in Airbnbs and short-term rentals. From the beaches of California to the mountains of Vermont, communities are grappling with what the future of short-term rentals looks like. Here are 18 cities in the US and Canada where residents and local politicians are fighting back against short-term rentals.
Six years on, our Airbnb properties brought in $118,000 in bookings last month. In March 2020, after only three months on Airbnb, we were set to cash-flow over $7,000 after expenses. In September 2020, we bought our third property: a four-bedroom cabin in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, near the Smoky Mountains. With income from the Nashville properties, we invested $35,000 in a cosmetic rehab of the Gatlinburg cabin — new floors, light fixtures, toilets, mirrors, stairs, paint, and landscaping. When we opened in November 2020, the place booked up almost immediately; revenue in that first month was $14,158.85.
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