The gap
Why payout is not profit
Search for an Airbnb profit calculator and most tools hand back your payout: nightly rate, times nights, minus the platform fee. That number is real and it is not profit. The payout is what Airbnb sends you; profit is what is left after the cleaning crew, the supply runs, the higher utility bills, and the housing cost itself are paid. Two listings with identical payouts can sit on opposite sides of break-even.
The platform-side math is the part we have already built a tool for; the Airbnb host fee calculator handles fee structures and occupancy tax interactively, and our host fees explainer covers why the take is roughly 15% of gross either way. This post handles the half below the payout line, which is the half that decides whether hosting is a business.
The formula
The Airbnb profit calculator formula, step by step
Start with gross booking revenue for the month.
Stay subtotals plus cleaning fees collected, before anything is deducted. Pull it from payout statements, not from your nightly-rate guess; per Airbnb’s fee documentation, the statement is the source of truth.
Subtract the platform take.
About 3% under the split fee or 14% to 16% under host-only, plus any occupancy tax you owe that the platform does not remit in your jurisdiction.
Subtract direct booking costs.
What you actually pay per turnover: the cleaner, laundry, consumables (coffee, soap, paper goods). These scale with bookings, so track them per stay, not per month.
Subtract fixed monthly costs.
Mortgage or rent share for the listed space, utilities above your baseline, insurance, software subscriptions, and one-twelfth of the annual permit. These hit whether or not anyone books.
Reserve for wear and repairs, then read the margin.
Set aside 5% to 10% of gross for the mattress that dies and the dryer that breaks. What remains is profit; divide it by gross for your margin. Run the same five lines every month and the trend tells you more than any single month does.
Worked example
A worked month
Take a one-bedroom that did 18 booked nights at $160 average, across six stays with a $80 cleaning fee each. Gross is $3,360 (stays $2,880 + cleaning $480). Here is the stack under the standard split fee.
| Line | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gross booking revenue | $3,360 | Stays + cleaning fees collected |
| Platform fee (~3% split) | -$101 | Host side only; guest paid theirs on top |
| Cleaning paid out (6 × $70) | -$420 | Cleaner costs less than the fee charged |
| Supplies and consumables | -$95 | Tracked per stay, summed monthly |
| Fixed costs share | -$1,450 | Rent share, utilities delta, insurance, permit |
| Repairs reserve (7% of gross) | -$235 | Spent eventually, always |
| Profit | $1,059 | 31.5% net margin |
Notice what moved the number: not the platform fee ($101), the fixed-cost line ($1,450). This is the recurring finding when hosts run the formula honestly. The platform take is visible and annoying; the housing cost share is invisible and decisive. It is also why occupancy is the lever that matters most: those fixed costs spread across 18 nights here, but they would spread across 24 next month, and the margin would jump without the rate changing at all.
The platform take is visible and annoying; the housing cost share is invisible and decisive.Worked example
Make it a system
From one-off math to a running system
A profit calculation you run once is trivia; run monthly, it is management. The month the supplies line doubles, you find the missing case of paper towels. The quarter the margin slides three points, you reprice before the slide becomes a year. The system requirement is small: one sheet, one row per booking, the five subtraction lines summarized monthly. Our Airbnb spreadsheet guide lays out that structure, and the cashflow walkthrough extends it to the timing side, because profit on paper and cash in the account move on different calendars.
However you build it, run the five lines on real statement numbers each month and the listing stops being a guess. If your margin came out somewhere surprising, high or low, tell us in the comments which cost row did it; reader numbers keep this guide honest, and Airbnb’s hosting resources cover the operational side of fixing whichever row misbehaves.
FAQ
Common questions, answered briefly
How do you calculate Airbnb profit?
What is a good profit margin for an Airbnb?
Is an Airbnb profit calculator different from a payout calculator?
How much profit does an average Airbnb make a month?
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