I see here positive mention of OwnerRez. I notice that they offer integration with QuickBooks, “Property Management” (defined as “Calculate commission, generate owner statements and record expenses”) as well as provide services like SMS, website.
https://www.ownerreservations.com/pricing
By way of background we have just one listing, which is in the U.S. on Airbnb and VRBO, $215/night, and administration has been easy, though a little tedious at tax time as my method has been to use a dedicated credit card for the listing plus a spreadsheet for cash expenses.
The downside to my current practice is that I don’t have categorization of the credit card expenses until I create that at tax time, and no real-time view of our economic performance (though I could do that by just categorizing the expenses monthly, which is what I’d need to do with QuickBooks).
OwnerRez cost is not much for one listing: $35/month for the base service, which provides channel management and legal agreements, and $80/month for all the services (about $10/month more for each of the four add-on services listed below).
My questions are:
- What benefits do you see OwnerRez for a Host such as myself? I’m not sure of any benefit to me of the base service except for the legal agreement capability, which I think I could also do on my own with DocuSign for $10/month.
Do you see these add-on benefits worthwhile ?
- Property Management
- Website
- Quick Books integration
- SMS messaging
Do Hosts see a benefit to using a tool like QuickBooks? Or keep their numbers more ad hoc like I do? [I would think that once you have more than one property/listing that the benefits of a tool like Quick Books soars because you might want to understand in real time the profitability of each property/listing.]
If I added the website add-on, would the idea be to drive repeat customers to that website so they could avoid Airbnb and VRBO fees? [For those of you with a social media presence I realize that you could drive followers to the website that way, probably not part of my strategy yet.] If I had my own website could I easily mimic what Airbnb/VRNO does with cancellation penalties? That is, offer a signup and TOS, take credit card and charge for cancellations, maybe also for damages? [I’m guessing ‘no.’]
One thing I value from VRBO is its ability to have the guest pay a $79 [typically] premium for $3,000 of insurance in case they damage anything – not sure whether I could get something close to that elsewhere if a booking came to me directly on my website. Do you know? I don’t want to rely on a legal agreement to go after guests for such damage.
I realize I am asking a lot of questions. Please feel free to pick and choose the question you’d like to respond to. And thank you, in advance.