A first-time guest costs you time and money to acquire. A repeat guest books directly, requires less communication, knows your property, and is more likely to leave a positive review.
Yet most vacation rental owners focus almost exclusively on acquiring new guests while ignoring the guests they’ve already hosted. This is a missed opportunity.
Why Repeat Guests Matter
The Economics
| Factor | First-Time Guest | Repeat Guest |
|---|---|---|
| Acquisition cost | Platform fees, marketing | Near zero |
| Communication needs | High (questions, instructions) | Low (they know the property) |
| Problem likelihood | Higher (unfamiliar with systems) | Lower |
| Review quality | Variable | Usually positive |
| Price sensitivity | Moderate to high | Lower (they know the value) |
A property that converts 20% of guests to repeat visitors reduces long-term marketing costs significantly.
Beyond Cost Savings
Repeat guests also:
- Book directly more often, avoiding platform fees
- Refer friends and family who become new guests
- Tolerate minor issues because of established relationship
- Provide better feedback because they care about the property
- Book during slow periods when they know availability
Why Guests Don’t Return
Before focusing on what to do, understand why guests don’t return:
They had a bad experience: Obvious, but often the experience was “fine” rather than memorable. Fine doesn’t create loyalty.
They forgot about you: Months pass, they plan another trip, and they don’t think to check if you’re available. You weren’t top of mind.
They want variety: Some travelers never stay the same place twice. You can’t convert everyone.
They can’t find you: They remember the stay but not the property name or how to book directly.
No reason to return: They visited for a specific purpose (wedding, event) and won’t be back to the area.
Most of these are addressable except the last one.
Creating Experiences Worth Repeating
Exceed Expectations
Guests return to places that exceeded their expectations—not just met them.
Meeting expectations:
- Property matches photos
- Clean and functional
- Good communication
- No major problems
Exceeding expectations:
- Thoughtful touches they didn’t expect
- Solved problems before they became complaints
- Local knowledge that enhanced their trip
- Personal attention that felt genuine
The gap between “met expectations” and “exceeded expectations” is where loyalty forms.
Personal Touches That Scale
You don’t need to write handwritten letters to every guest. But small personalized touches make stays memorable:
Before arrival:
- Note their occasion if mentioned (birthday, anniversary, reunion)
- Remember preferences from booking communication
- Customize recommendations based on their stated interests
During stay:
- Welcome note addressing them by name
- Relevant local tips based on travel party (families vs. couples)
- Small welcome gift appropriate to occasion
After stay:
- Thank-you message referencing something specific about their stay
- Personalized invitation to return
Anticipate Needs
The best experiences feel effortless because someone else thought ahead.
What guests might need before they know it:
- Extra phone chargers in convenient spots
- Common forgotten items (toothbrush, phone charger, sunscreen)
- Clear instructions for things they’ll need to figure out
- Information about the area tailored to their interests
- Solutions to problems your property commonly creates
Staying Top of Mind
Capture Contact Information
On platforms, you often can’t contact past guests directly. Work within the rules to build connections:
Within platform policies:
- Most platforms allow communication about the current or past stay
- Some allow inviting guests to follow you on social media
- Direct booking guests can be added to your contact list
Direct booking advantages:
- Build email list
- Send future offers directly
- No platform restrictions
Post-Stay Communication
Don’t let the relationship end at checkout.
Immediately after checkout: Thank them personally. Reference something specific about their stay.
When you leave a review: Mention you’d welcome them back.
Before their next potential trip: If you know they visit annually for an event or season, reach out ahead.
Seasonal updates: Brief, non-spammy updates about the property or area can keep you top of mind.
Make Returning Easy
Remove friction from rebooking:
- Clear property name they’ll remember
- Easy-to-find direct booking option
- Return guest discounts (more on this below)
- Flexible dates when possible for repeat guests
Incentivizing Return Visits
Return Guest Discounts
A discount for repeat guests costs you less than platform fees for new guest acquisition.
Approaches:
- Flat percentage off (10-15% typical)
- Reduced cleaning fee
- Free early check-in or late checkout
- Complimentary amenity upgrade
When to offer:
- In thank-you message after first stay
- When they inquire about returning
- As part of regular past guest outreach
Loyalty Programs
For owners with multiple properties or consistent repeat business:
- Points toward free nights
- Priority booking during high-demand periods
- Exclusive rates for off-platform booking
Referral Incentives
Happy guests know other potential guests.
- Discount for guest who referred
- Discount for the new guest they referred
- Both parties benefit
Practical Systems
Track Your Guests
You can’t build relationships if you don’t remember people.
What to track:
- Guest names and contact info (where permitted)
- Stay dates and property
- Purpose of visit (vacation, event, work)
- Party composition (family, couple, group)
- Preferences noted
- Any issues and how resolved
- Review left
Simple systems:
- Spreadsheet with basic info
- Property management software with guest profiles
- CRM tool for more sophisticated tracking
Segment Your Outreach
Not all past guests are equal candidates for return visits.
High-priority repeat candidates:
- Excellent reviewers
- Long-stay guests (invested more in learning the property)
- Annual visitors to the area
- Problem-free stays
- Direct bookers
Lower priority:
- One-time event visitors (weddings, etc.)
- Guests who had significant complaints
- Very short stays
- Very price-sensitive bookers
Focus energy on guests most likely to return.
Measure What Matters
Track your repeat booking performance:
- What percentage of guests return?
- What’s the average time between visits?
- Which booking sources produce the most repeat guests?
- Which guest types are most likely to return?
- What do repeat guests say in reviews?
Use this data to refine your approach.
The Long Game
Building a base of repeat guests takes years. It requires:
- Consistent quality across every stay
- Systematic communication before, during, and after
- Systems to track and follow up with guests
- Patience as relationships develop
But the payoff compounds over time. A property with 30% repeat guests has a significant advantage over a competitor starting from zero each booking cycle.
Building guest loyalty requires attention to every touchpoint. Learn how our management approach creates the kind of experiences that generate repeat bookings.