Pet-Friendly STRs: The Revenue Upside Most Owners Miss

Pet-Friendly STRs: The Revenue Upside Most Owners Miss

For many STR owners, allowing pets feels risky.

Concerns usually sound like:

  • “Pets will damage the home.” 
  • “It’s more wear and tear.” 
  • “The cleaner will hate it.” 
  • “It’s not worth the headache.” 

And sometimes — depending on the property — those concerns are valid.

But here’s what surprises most owners:

Pet-friendly STRs often outperform non-pet listings in both occupancy and revenue when done intentionally.

Let’s talk about when pet-friendly makes sense, when it doesn’t, and how to approach it strategically.

 

Why Pet-Friendly Listings Book Faster

Travel habits have changed.

More guests are:

  • Traveling with dogs instead of boarding them 
  • Taking longer stays 
  • Choosing destinations where outdoor access matters 

In many markets, pet-friendly homes:

  • Show up in fewer competing searches 
  • Book earlier 
  • Capture guests willing to pay a premium 

It’s not about being “nice to pets.”

It’s about meeting demand where supply is limited.

 

The Revenue Advantage Most Owners Don’t See

Pet-friendly STRs often benefit from:

  • Higher occupancy, especially in shoulder seasons 
  • Longer average stays 
  • Less price sensitivity (pet owners have fewer options) 
  • Repeat bookings from loyal guests 

In several of our markets, pet-friendly homes outperform similar non-pet listings — without lowering nightly rates.

This isn’t guaranteed, but it’s common when the home is set up correctly.

 

The Mistake Owners Make When Going Pet-Friendly

The biggest mistake we see isn’t allowing pets.

It’s allowing pets without a plan.

Problems usually come from:

  • No clear pet rules 
  • No property prep 
  • No inspection standards 
  • No expectation-setting with guests 

That’s when owners feel like “pets ruined the house,” when in reality, systems were missing.

 

How to Do Pet-Friendly the Right Way

When we recommend pet-friendly, it always includes guardrails.

That often means:

  • Clear pet policies and fees 
  • Size or quantity limits 
  • Fenced yards where possible 
  • Durable furniture and flooring choices 
  • Pet-specific cleaning protocols 
  • Visible pet amenities (beds, bowls, treats) 

These steps protect the home and improve guest experience.

Pet-friendly doesn’t mean low standards.

It means intentional standards.

 

When Pet-Friendly Is Not a Good Fit

Pet-friendly is not right for every property.

We’re cautious when:

  • HOA rules restrict pets 
  • The home has high-risk finishes that can’t be protected 
  • The layout makes containment difficult 
  • The owner is strongly opposed to any added wear 

Sometimes the ROI doesn’t justify the tradeoff — and saying no is the right call.

That’s part of being selective.

 

Why This Often Works Better Than Expensive Renovations

One of the reasons we like pet-friendly as an option is its low barrier to entry.

Compared to:

  • Major remodels 
  • Full design overhauls 
  • High-cost amenities 

Pet-friendly can be a relatively low-cost shift that immediately:

  • Expands demand 
  • Improves booking velocity 
  • Strengthens positioning 

Not always — but often enough to be worth analyzing.

 

The Bigger Question Owners Should Ask

Instead of:

“Should I allow pets?”

Ask:

“Is my property missing demand that could be captured safely and profitably?”

That’s an ROI question — not an emotional one.

 

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