Income management

Dynamic pricing en location courte durée : ce qui change vraiment vos revenus

Setting a nightly price is no longer a cosmetic choice. It is a permanent economic trade-off between occupancy and average revenue, replayed every day as demand, weather and the events calendar shift.

Dynamic pricing en location courte durée : ce qui change vraiment vos revenus

What dynamic pricing actually covers

Dynamic pricing means adjusting a nightly price based on fast-moving variables: city-wide occupancy, booking window, day of the week, local events, weather forecast, platform behavior. Where a fixed price only captures one equilibrium point, a dynamic model tries to follow a willingness-to-pay curve.

In practice, it requires three building blocks: reliable input data (events calendar, competitor prices, historical occupancy), a decision algorithm (which weights the variables and proposes a price per night), and disciplined execution (price updates across every channel, multiple times per week).

Why a fixed price costs you money

A fixed price cannot recognize a week of exceptional demand. It leaves money on the table in high season and drives travelers away in low season. Over a full calendar, both effects stack: fewer nights sold in winter, less revenue per night in summer. The gap is often measured in several thousand euros a year on a standard property.

The classic trap is setting a price from a fixed neighborhood benchmark. The neighborhood shifts, competing listings raise or lower their prices every day, and a benchmark taken six months ago has no predictive value for next week.

The indicators to steer by

Three indicators structure a serious pricing process. The 30-day rolling occupancy rate measures the immediate health of the property. RevPAR (revenue per available night) bundles price and occupancy into a single figure comparable from month to month. The average booking window shows whether demand is contracting or stretching: a shortening window often signals it is time to lower the price to fill near-term nights.

The last-minute discount trap

Many owners react to a quiet calendar by slashing prices the day before. It is tempting and effective in isolation, but repeated, the reflex trains a clientele that learns to wait for the discount. Over time, the average displayed price drops and the property falls out of the search results of travelers who book more than four weeks ahead, who are precisely the best payers.

Serious dynamic pricing anticipates. Instead of a late fire-sale, it adjusts gently twenty days before arrival. This mechanic preserves the occupancy rate, the average price and the perceived value of the property on the platforms.

Seasonality and local events

Une destination n’est pas un marché homogène. À Tignes, une semaine sans neige en février peut faire perdre 30% de demande. À Marrakech, un festival ou un Marathon des Sables fait monter la disposition à payer sur certains quartiers. À Annecy, le retour des beaux jours change radicalement le niveau de prix possible. A local team connaît ces nuances que ni un outil générique ni un benchmark national ne capturent.

Raw neighborhood data must therefore be read through this local filter. That is exactly what a concierge service rooted on the destination adds on top of the algorithm: the contextual interpretation that turns data into a sound decision.

What we build at Yes

The local team combines two things: daily competitive monitoring on the micro-market of each property (often a neighborhood or a few-street stretch), and a pricing model fed by the destination’s historical data. Prices are adjusted multiple times per week, with a floor agreed with the owner to avoid fire-sale nights.

The goal is not to maximize the price of an isolated night, but cumulative revenue over a rolling 12 months. That is the difference between an opportunistic approach and a partnership approach, and it is what lets the same property produce stable results year over year, regardless of trends.

In summary

Dynamic pricing is not a technical gimmick, it is an economic discipline. It requires reliable data, a model calibrated to the destination, and disciplined execution week after week. Measurable gains arrive only if all three are held.

For an owner starting out, the useful reflex is less about finding the perfect tool than about making sure their partner has a local team that interprets the data. It is the contextual interpretation, not the algorithm alone, that delivers the additional net revenue over the year.

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Frequently asked questions

Is dynamic pricing suitable for small properties?

Yes. The relative gain from dynamic pricing is often higher on a studio or one-bedroom than on a villa, because demand on these formats is more volatile and reacts faster to price adjustments.

How often per week are prices adjusted?

On a Yes property, prices are reviewed on average three times per week in high season, and weekly in low season, on top of automatic adjustments triggered by detected events.

Can the owner set a floor price?

Yes, always. The floor is set contractually at onboarding and can be revised by mutual agreement during the year if the market shifts.

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