Why this matters
What a host spreadsheet actually has to do
The best Airbnb spreadsheet for hosts isn’t the one with the prettiest dashboard; it’s the one that survives a real booking. The Airbnb host spreadsheet category is one of the most search-saturated and least quality-controlled on the internet. The top results sell pretty dashboards with three problems: data entry takes longer than the dashboard saves, the formulas break the first time a real booking has a host fee mismatch, and the multi-property version uses a single tab that turns into a swamp by month four. We’ve used a working version for several years and rebuilt the spreadsheet three times because the same problems kept resurfacing. So the criteria for “best” are mechanical, not aesthetic.
The decision is also affected by how many properties you manage. A one-property host can survive on a free template; a five-property host can’t. Multi-property is where most free templates fail, because the templates assume a single column for “income” rather than per-property columns plus a summary tab. We’ll cover the threshold below.
What to look for
Five things that separate a working host spreadsheet from a pretty one
| What it does | Bare minimum | What “best” looks like | Marketing bait to ignore |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income tracking | Per-booking row | Per-booking row + automatic month/year summary | “Real-time API sync” promises |
| Expense tracking | Generic categories | Cleaning, supplies, repairs, utilities, taxes split out | “100+ pre-loaded categories” |
| Host fee handling | Flat 3% deduction | 15% mode + 3% mode + per-booking override | “Auto-calculated host fees” |
| Multi-property | One tab per property | Per-property tab + cross-property summary tab | “Unlimited properties” with one shared tab |
| Tax prep | Year sum only | Schedule E-aligned categories, deductible flags | “Tax-ready” without category alignment |
Host fee handling is where most templates fail in 2026. Airbnb runs two host-fee structures: the standard 3% (split fee, where the guest pays Airbnb’s service fee) and the 15% (host-only fee, where the host pays everything and there’s no guest service fee). Templates built before 2022 often assume one or the other and break on the modern host who runs both depending on listing or season. A working spreadsheet exposes both modes and lets you override per booking. See our host fee calculator for the math.
Picks
Five picks for the best Airbnb spreadsheet for hosts in 2026
Templacity Airbnb Spreadsheet for Hosts
Disclosure: ours. Built in Google Sheets, copyable to your Drive in one click. Per-booking income tracking, per-property tabs with a cross-property summary tab, both 3% and 15% host fee modes with per-booking override, expense categories aligned with Schedule E for tax prep. Designed for one to ten properties without breaking. The cleanest single answer to the criteria above. Product page.
Lodgify free Airbnb expenses template
The Lodgify free template is the strongest free option. Solid expense category structure, multi-property tabs, basic income tracking. Limitations: host fee handling is single-mode, and the multi-property summary requires manual aggregation. Best as a starting point for one or two properties before paying for more.
Stessa (not a spreadsheet, but worth mentioning)
If you’d genuinely rather not run a spreadsheet, Stessa is the closest software replacement. Free for up to ten properties, pulls bank and mortgage data automatically, generates Schedule E-aligned reports. The trade-off is that you give up control of your data and category structure. Best for hosts whose preference is “set and forget” rather than “see and check.”
SpreadsheetsHub Rental Property template
Premium Excel-and-Google-Sheets template at the $40-ish range. Strong on multi-property summary dashboards and 5-year projections, weaker on day-to-day data entry ergonomics. Best for hosts who care about long-term financial modeling more than daily tracking.
Custom-built Google Sheet (rolled-your-own)
For hosts who already use Google Sheets daily, building a custom spreadsheet from scratch is sometimes the right answer. Six tabs (income, expenses, host fees, occupancy, summary, tax prep), one row per booking, data validation on category fields. Takes 4 to 6 hours to build properly and 30 minutes a week to maintain. Worth it if you have specific tax categories or reporting needs that no template captures.
The best Airbnb spreadsheet for hosts is the one you’ll actually update on a Tuesday after a check-out, not the one with the prettiest dashboard.What we found
What to avoid
Three traps in Airbnb host spreadsheets
Looks like a feature
- “Real-time Airbnb API sync.”
- “100+ pre-loaded expense categories.”
- Single tab “unlimited properties.”
Why it isn’t
- Airbnb’s official API is not open to public templates; this is exporting a CSV from your dashboard, manually.
- You’ll prune 90 to keep 10. Pre-loaded means more data validation problems, not fewer.
- Mixed-property data on one tab makes month-end reconciliation impossible past three properties.
The Airbnb API trap is the most-marketed and most-broken. Airbnb does not currently offer an open API for public spreadsheet templates. Templates that claim “real-time sync” are exporting CSV from the host dashboard manually, then pasting into the sheet. Useful, but not real-time, and the marketing label is misleading. Plan to do the export once a week.
When to skip
When you don’t need an Airbnb spreadsheet at all
Three scenarios where a spreadsheet is the wrong tool. First, if you have one property and Airbnb is your only income stream, the host dashboard plus your bank’s transaction history is enough; the spreadsheet adds work without adding clarity. Second, if your accountant handles Schedule E and you’d rather hand them statements than reconcile categories yourself, skip the spreadsheet and pay the accountant to handle the grunt work. Third, if you’re already running QuickBooks or similar, adding a spreadsheet creates a second source of truth that conflicts with the first.
The threshold where a spreadsheet starts earning its place is roughly two-or-more properties with mixed host-fee structures. Below that, the dashboard plus bank statements are enough. Above it, the spreadsheet is faster than reconciling at year end. Our Airbnb expenses spreadsheet piece goes deeper on the expense side specifically, and our Google Sheets template piece covers the technical setup.
The verdict
Decision shortcut
One property, no employees, simple tax structure: Lodgify free template, or skip and use the host dashboard. Two to five properties: Templacity spreadsheet, because the multi-property summary and dual host-fee mode pay for themselves at year end. Five-plus properties: either Templacity plus an accountant, or move to Stessa if you’d rather not run a spreadsheet. Long-term financial modelling needs: SpreadsheetsHub Rental Property template alongside whichever daily-tracking spreadsheet you pick.
The Airbnb spreadsheet field changes whenever Airbnb adjusts host-fee structures (last big change was 2022). We update our template alongside those changes. If you’ve found a template that survived a real Tuesday and isn’t on this list, drop it in the comments. We want to hear which spreadsheets actually earn their place, not which ones the screenshots promise.
FAQ
If yours isn’t above, drop the question in the comments and we’ll add it.
People also ask