Airbnb: Bookings for the summer are taking off – Greece top among 20 European countries
Explosion of short-term bookings from the beginning of June until the end of September this year – Higher than 2019
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The bookings of short-term rental accommodation in Greece for the summer period are “running” with a three-digit percentage, bringing our country to the top among 20 European countries.
Analytically, as shown by AirDNA data, bookings for Airbnb in Greece from the beginning of June until the end of September increased by 232% compared to the corresponding bookings made last year in the same period. It is followed by Portugal with an increase of 196% and Croatia with an increase of 151%.
Santorini (increase 552%), Athens (+ 429%) and Corfu (+ 317%) are the top Greek destinations.
Overall, the number of bookings made this year is 7% higher compared to the corresponding size of 2019, ie the last year before the pandemic.
Based on AirDNA data and concern active real estate ads (with at least one lease in the last 30 days of each reporting period) and result from the analysis of data from the Airbnb and VRBO platforms, currently in Athens, Thessaloniki, Crete, Mykonos, Corfu, Rhodes, Santorini, Paros, Rhodes, Zakynthos, Kassandra, Sithonia, Naxos and the Small Cyclades, Lefkada, Kefalonia and Kalamata there are more than 38,000 short-term rental accommodation active, while a total of 74,000 operate in all of Greece.
In July last year, 112,700 accommodations were registered nationwide and 7,759 in the center of Athens. In the corresponding month of 2019, 132,800 and 11,590 properties were offered on the market respectively. July is the month with the highest demand.
However, according to AirDNA analysts, future forecasts for the European market remain slightly uncertain due to Russia’s ongoing attack on Ukraine, the potential impact of new Covid-19 variants and the fact that demand for short-term rental accommodation continues to exceed .
For the time being, the Russia-Ukraine crisis does not seem to have affected bookings, with analysts expecting the impact of the war to be felt later.
Bookings record in February
Demand peaked after the European continent pandemic in February 2022, with 20.8% more overnight stays compared to February 2019 and 73.9% more overnight stays compared to February 2021. This demand pushed the average daily prices (ADR) 2% higher than the previous year and 28.9% higher than February 2019.
For Europe, all of this led to a 77.3% year-on-year increase in short-term rental revenue to € 2.4 billion ($ 2.6 billion) for February. By comparison, January 2022 revenue also increased by 103.4% on an annual basis.
Peaking in summer
In terms of peak months (June to September), from the booking data on March 1, there were 74% more summer bookings than in 2021, while the rates continued to increase by 4.2% compared to last year (and 25.1% higher than the percentages of 2019).
The supply of available entries — previously reduced by the pandemic — continues to recover across the continent (+ 4.1%), but remains lower than in 2019 (-7.5%).
Average revenue per available listing in Europe also increased by 17.5% year-on-year, which can be attributed to the increase in ADRs along with fewer available listings.
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