We have 2 pricing options – you can choose the one that suits you best.
All our hosts provide a ₪433 deposit when they join Airsorted, to go towards the total setup costs. You can find out more about this below.
We can offer you discounts when listing more than one property with Airsorted. Speak to the team to learn more.
Your ₪433 deposit goes a long way. It goes towards:
If you decide you’d like to stop using Airsorted for good, we’ll happily return your deposit.
There are just two things we require before we can refund a deposit:
If you haven’t done, or are unable to do these things, you can still leave the service, in this case we just need to keep the deposit as partial cover of your setup costs.
Like Airbnb, we take commission from the total amount each guest pays, including their cleaning fee. This covers the management cost of arranging linen collection and cleans.
Like any host, you’ll receive payments from Airbnb (minus their fee) the day after a guest checks in.
We collect our commission from your account via weekly Direct Debits. Cleaning fees are collected separately, two days after each clean has taken place.
All of this occurs automatically – so you never have the hassle of making manual payments.
Here’s an example breakdown:
Guest |
|
Airbnb |
|
Airsorted |
|
Your total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Your first guest stays! They make a payment for their stay and a cleaning fee. | Airbnb take their standard hosting fee of 3% | We take our management commission of 15% and the initial guest cleaning fee. | This is your total earnings after the booking. | |||
+ ₪1,452 Booking cost + ₪48 Cleaning fee |
- ₪52.65 3% Hosting fee (+ VAT) |
- ₪254.01 management fee (+ VAT) - ₪48 guest cleaning fee |
||||
+ ₪1,500 (Example payment) |
- ₪52.65 |
- ₪302.01 |
₪1,145.34 |
+ ₪1,452 Booking cost
+ ₪48 Cleaning fee
+ ₪1,500
(Example payment)- ₪52.65 3% Hosting fee
(+ VAT)
- ₪52.65
- ₪254.01 management fee
(+ VAT)
- ₪48 guest cleaning fee
- ₪302.01
₪1,145.34
Airbnb will pay you directly on the second day of each booking. The nightly rental and the cleaning fee from the guest will come into your account at the same time. Airsorted will then collect the cleaning fee 48 hours after the clean in order to pay the laundry provider and housekeeper, and collect the management fee via weekly Direct Debits.
You can see a history of all of your bookings, guest reviews and earnings in the host dashboard. We’ll create an account for you to login and manage all of your Airsorted preferences when you join us. Here’s a sneak peak of how the performance tab looks...
We add a cleaning fee to your Airbnb listing, which your guest pays. Guests are used to seeing this on Airbnb listings.
The one exception is the very first clean in your property. This is the only clean you’ll need to pay for, but you can also book one-off cleans whenever you like if you’re using the property yourself.
Two days after a clean has taken place, we’ll collect the cleaning fee from your account. The cost of a clean is unique to your property, and ensures cleans of the highest standard are delivered.
We do take a commission on the cleaning fee your guests pay (just as Airbnb does). We do this to cover the cost of organising linen collection and cleans for your property.
We will happily help with this - we can replace these materials at cost if you’d like us to.
Some hosts would like services that go beyond standard Airbnb management and we’re happy to help with those tasks as well. If you would like to enlist one of our ‘Sorters’, we offer:
‘Sorter’ call-out
₪120 per job up to 2 hours and ₪60 per hour thereafter. This includes:
Mid-range maintenance call-out
₪250-₪500 per hour (+ VAT):
Specialist call outs
Charged at cost:
The charges for any of these maintenance services goes entirely to the person/company completing the task. Organising any of this for you is included in our management fee.
Hosting without support can take up to 50 hours each month. That's 600 hours a year. Or the time it takes to master a new language*…
*The Foreign Service Institute of the US Department of State’s approximate learning expectations for languages, based on the time it takes to achieve “proficiency”.