The Airbnb Superhost

Neil Harvey

Welcome to The Airbnb Superhost, your ultimate guide to mastering the art of hosting on Airbnb.  In each episode, lasting about 15 minutes, Neil will reveal the secrets to creating unforgettable guest experiences and maximizing the potential of your property, drawing on over 10 consecutive years as a qualifying Airbnb Superhost and hosting over 2000 guests from over 40 countries. With a focus on 3 specific aspects of running an Airbnb business; the host, the property, and Airbnb itself, Neil provides step-by-step guidance on everything from ambiance creation to effective communication. In each episode, a Superhost Secret will help you elevate your hosting game and keep guests coming back for more. Whether you're a seasoned host or just starting out, Neil’s actionable tips and tricks will help you become a hospitality superstar. Disclaimer: The Airbnb Superhost is in no way affiliated with Airbnb. All ideas, thoughts, concepts and data presented in this podcast are entirely Neil’s own and do not represent the views of Airbnb. 

  1. 19h ago

    #121. Helicopters and Hosting - what they have in common.

    What does a German helicopter paramedic working on North Sea wind farms have in common with an Airbnb host in Hertfordshire? Surprisingly… quite a lot. In this slightly different episode, I welcome back one of my regular guests, Vito, who has travelled over from Germany and joined me to discuss something that sits at the heart of both our worlds: communication. In his profession, ambiguity can have serious consequences. Instructions have to be precise, language must remain consistent and everyone needs to understand exactly what is expected of them. The more we talked, the more I realised that these same principles are what make hosting enjoyable too. Because guests don't arrive knowing how your home works. They don't know which room is theirs, where things belong or what the unwritten rules are. And if we leave them to guess, we unintentionally create confusion and anxiety. In this episode we discuss: • Why repeating the same language consistently creates certainty. • How helicopter crews use standardised words to avoid misunderstandings. • Why saying "Up, up, up" leaves no room for interpretation. • The importance of creating systems that people can instantly understand. • Why naming and labelling rooms removes uncertainty. • How visible boundaries help guests relax. • Why assumptions are often the root cause of mistakes. • How reducing mental workload creates a better experience. • Why signs and labels are not overkill – they're kindness. • How clarity removes the need for constant corrections. One of my favourite moments was hearing Vito describe his experience as a returning guest in my home. He explained how seeing the same room name repeated on his door, his fridge shelf, his food box and his shower tray created an immediate sense of reassurance. Nothing was left to guesswork. And that is exactly the point. Because when guests know where they are, where things belong and what is expected of them, everybody relaxes. Superhost Secret "If you want guests to relax, remove the need for them to think." Great hosting isn't about giving people more information, it’s about removing ambiguity. When guests don't have to stop and ask themselves, "Which room is mine?", "Can I use this?" or "Am I allowed to do that?", you've created something very powerful. You've created clarity, which is one of the greatest gifts a host can give. If you'd like to learn more about turning your own home into an income stream through hosting, there is a link below to register your interest in one of my regular webinars. And remember to follow me on social media @SuperhostNeil for more tips, tricks and a bit of laughter along the way. Until next time, may your rooms be booked, your reviews be 5-star and clarity be the key to less stress.   Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    18 min
  2. Jun 16

    #120. Overcoming the fear of strangers

    What if your biggest obstacle to becoming an Airbnb host isn't Airbnb at all? For years, I've described myself as an Airbnb Superhost, speaker and mentor. But this week, while refreshing my LinkedIn profile, I had a realisation that completely changed how I describe what I do. Because if Airbnb disappeared tomorrow... everything I teach would still exist. So perhaps I don't teach Airbnb at all. Perhaps what I really teach is something far more fundamental. The biggest objection I hear whenever I speak at networking events isn't: "I don't have a spare room." Or: "I don't know how Airbnb works." It's always the same thing: "I could never have strangers in my home." But are people really afraid of strangers? Or is "strangers" simply a label we attach to deeper fears? In this episode, I explore: 🏡 Why the fear of strangers is usually a collection of other worries. 🏡 The surprising link between Airbnb and the warnings we were given as children. 🏡 Why hospitality is largely an invisible skill. 🏡 How conversation creates rapport, and how rapport multiplied by time creates trust. 🏡 How strangers can become a community when relationships are intentionally engineered. 🏡 Why over 65% of my business now comes from repeat guests. 🏡 The question a guest asked me after ten years of hosting that finally helped me understand what I actually teach. This episode isn't really about Airbnb. It's about human psychology. It's about helping people see their homes differently. And perhaps more importantly, helping them see other people differently too. Because after ten years, over 2,000 guests and people from more than forty countries passing through my front door, I've learnt something rather special. 🔑 Superhost Secret "Strangers don't become guests when they walk through your front door. They become guests when you stop seeing them as strangers." 📚 Resources Mentioned 📖 How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie 📲 Follow me on social media: @SuperhostNeil 🎙️ Join one of my regular live webinars to learn how to create an income from your own home and explore whether Airbnb hosting could work for you. 🎧 Key Takeaway I don't teach people how to do Airbnb. I teach people how to make other people feel at home. Because once you overcome your fear of strangers, everything else becomes teachable. And that's when hosting stops being all about money... and starts becoming enormous fun.   Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    13 min
  3. Jun 9

    #119. How to build a business that works without you

    What do a wood-fired hot tub, a helicopter paramedic and a Tokyo train guard all have in common? Checklists. In this episode, Neil shares a recent hosting mishap that occurred while he was away from home. Despite seven years of experience managing his wood-fired hot tub, a delegated task didn't go quite to plan, resulting in disappointed guests and a valuable lesson about systems, routines and human nature. Drawing inspiration from Atul Gawande's bestselling book The Checklist Manifesto, Neil explores why even experienced people overlook simple tasks, and how creating effective routines can dramatically reduce errors. You'll hear: • Why systems only prove their worth when you're not there • The hot-tub mistake that prompted a rethink of an established routine • How the aviation and medical industries use checklists to save lives • The surprising psychology behind saying checklist items out loud • Neil's simple "5 Bs" room-preparation system: Bed, Bin, Bath, Beauty, Bulb • How physical reminders can be more effective than relying on memory alone Whether you're an Airbnb host, run a business, manage a team, or simply want to stop important things slipping through the cracks, this episode will help you create systems that work consistently—even when someone else is doing the job. Superhost Secret "If a task is important, then systemise it." And once you've systemised it, test it on someone coming to it cold. If it doesn't work exactly as you intended, refine it until it does. Mentioned in this Episode • The Checklist Manifesto – Atul Gawande Interested in Becoming an Airbnb Host? Neil regularly hosts free webinars for people interested in creating an income from their own home through Airbnb hosting. Details and registration links can be found in the show notes below. Connect with Neil Instagram: @SuperhostNeil The Airbnb Superhost Podcast – helping you create more income, better reviews and a hosting business that works even when you're not there.   Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    14 min
  4. Jun 2

    #118. There's nowt as queer as folk!

    After hosting more than 2,000 guests and living through over 18,000 guest nights, you might think I’ve seen it all. Trust me, I haven’t. In this episode, I explore one of the most fascinating aspects of hosting: the fact that every guest arrives with their own unique interpretation of how the world works. What seems obvious to us may be completely unfamiliar to somebody else. Using a series of real-life hosting stories, I look at how easy it is to judge behaviour through our own lens and how often our first assumptions turn out to be wrong. From leaking mango juice cartons and food-stained carpets to unexpected emotional reactions and misunderstood behaviours, this episode isn't really about guests being strange at all. It's about how our own unconscious prejudices can lead us to create stories that aren't necessarily true. In this episode: • Why "normal" means something different to every guest • What unconscious prejudice really is and how it influences our reactions • The difference between being a judge and being a detective • Why we rarely know the full story behind someone else's behaviour • How curiosity can be more useful than irritation • The hidden lessons that hosting teaches us about human nature • Why some of the most challenging guest interactions can become the most valuable learning experiences Key Takeaway When guests do something unexpected, our first instinct is often to judge their behaviour against our own standards and experiences. But what if the problem isn't the guest? What if we're simply missing part of the story? As hosts, we only ever see one chapter of a person's life when they walk through our front door. The pages that came before are usually hidden from view. Superhost Secret When guests do something unexpected, get curious before adopting any other emotion. If we can replace irritation with curiosity, judgement with understanding, and assumptions with questions, we may discover that there was a perfectly reasonable explanation all along. Memorable Quote "We know nothing of a guest's past. We have no context. We only see the chapter of their life that walks through our front door." Want to Learn More About Hosting? I'm running regular online webinars for aspiring and existing hosts where I share the lessons I've learned from ten years of hosting, over 2,000 guests and more than 18,000 guest nights. If you'd like to discover how your own home could become an income-generating asset, check the webinar registration link below. Connect with Neil Instagram: @SuperhostNeil Podcast: The Airbnb Superhost Podcast Sharing ten years of real-world hosting experience, one guest story at a time.   Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    17 min
  5. May 26

    #117 Why My Festival Guests Return Each Year

    What if the reason guests return year after year has very little to do with the room… and everything to do with how you make them feel? In this episode of the Airbnb Superhost Podcast, I share the fascinating psychology behind why the same festival guests keep returning to stay with me every May Bank Holiday — and why many of them now feel more like a temporary tribe than Airbnb guests. From fire pits and BBQs to WhatsApp groups and Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, this episode explores how emotional connection, belonging and shared experiences create guest loyalty that goes far beyond accommodation. I explain:  Why guests rarely remember where they slept — but always remember how they felt  How arranging chairs in a circle completely changes social dynamics  Why fire pits are psychologically powerful  How shared food creates shared time, trust and memories  The hidden relationship between rapport, time and trust  Why some guests now book almost a year in advance  How one guest from Italy nearly agreed to sleep under my conservatory table just to stay part of the group!  The surprising moment I discovered my guests had formed their own WhatsApp community This episode is really about engineered belonging. Because when guests bond with each other — not just with you — something remarkable happens:  they stop shopping around. Superhost Secret “Don’t just host the stay — host the relationships. That’s not only between you and the guest, but also between the other guests staying with you at the same time.”In this episode:  Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and hospitality psychology  Creating emotional experiences through hosting  Why “fed people stay longer”  Designing spaces that encourage connection  How traditions and rituals create repeat bookings  Building trust through rapport × time Memorable Quote from the Episode “The room gets the guests through the door. The feeling gets them back next year.”If you’re interested in learning how to turn your own home into an income-generating Airbnb business, I regularly run live webinars where I share ten years of hosting experience, systems and strategies that helped me become a Superhost hosting over 18,000 guest nights. You can register your interest using the webinar link below. And if you enjoyed this episode, follow me on Instagram:  @SuperhostNeil Till next time — may your rooms be booked, your reviews 5-star and your guests feel like they belong.   Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    18 min
  6. May 19

    #116 If you want a star - create the stage

    What does it really mean to welcome someone? In this episode, I explore a lesson I’ve been reminded of while travelling around the UK speaking at property networking events: when we arrive somewhere unfamiliar, we all ask the same silent questions. Am I expected?  Am I welcome?  Do I matter?  What do I do next?  Am I in the way?  Have I made the right decision? And whether you’re a guest arriving at an Airbnb, a speaker walking into a venue, or a nervous delegate entering a room full of strangers, one thing is true: People perform better when they feel expected, safe and valued. So if we want great guests, we need to create the right stage for them to step onto. In this episode I share how my recent experiences as a speaker have reminded me what it feels like to be the person arriving somewhere new — and how that directly relates to the way we welcome Airbnb guests. I also tell the story of a Beethoven piano concerto I performed back in 1996, and how one tiny gesture from my stage-manager friend completely changed my state of mind before I sat at the piano. It was a powerful reminder that small acts of care can create the mental space people need to be at their best. From there, I look at three important parts of the arrival experience: Acknowledgement — why even a quick “I’m glad you’ve made it” can stop someone feeling invisible. Basic needs — why a cup of tea, a snack, or a moment to sit down can act as a reset button after a long journey. Support systems — why the people who arrive with your guest may be part of what helps them feel safe. I also revisit what I call The Tea Trap — my simple technique for slowing guests down, helping them settle, and creating a moment of connection when they first arrive. Superhost Secret This week’s Superhost Secret is: In the first five minutes, give every arriving guest the 3-Ps of arrival: Person, Place and Prompt. That means: Person: Be the person who welcomes them. Place: Show them where they belong. Prompt: Give them the next step. For example: “Hi, I’m Neil — I’m glad you’ve made it here safely.”  “Let me show you your room and where to put your bags.”  “Settle in, and come down in ten minutes for a cup of tea.” That simple routine answers most of the questions a guest may never say out loud: Am I expected? Am I welcome? Am I in the way? What do I do next? Have I made the right decision? Because the first few minutes of a stay can set the tone for the whole experience. Key takeaway A great welcome is not just about opening the door. It is about helping someone emotionally arrive. If you want your guests to be calm, thoughtful, relaxed and respectful, don’t expect them to become that by accident. Create the conditions for it. If you want a star, create the stage. This week’s limerick If guests seem unsure when they stop,  Don’t leave them to mentally flop.  Give Person and Place,  Then a Prompt, just in case,  And your welcome will rise to the top. Want to learn more about hosting? If you’re thinking about earning money from your own home through Airbnb, I regularly run a webinar where I share what I’ve learned from over a decade of live-in hosting. You’ll find the registration link below. You can also follow me on Instagram: @SuperhostNeil Till next time — may your rooms be booked, your reviews be 5-star, and your mastery of the 3-Ps create the star guests we all want.    Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    16 min
  7. May 12

    #115 When guests make a suggestion

    Episode 115 – When a Guest Makes a Suggestion What if the things holding your Airbnb back are the very things you’ve stopped noticing? In this episode, I explore one of the most important lessons hosting has taught me over the last decade: fresh eyes see what familiarity hides. From a nearly dangerous oven door… to a toilet roll in the wrong place for ten years… to a rain-soaked BBQ experience that unexpectedly led to a complete kitchenette upgrade, this episode is all about how guest feedback — when listened to properly — can quietly transform your hosting business. But this isn’t really an episode about complaints. It’s about: blind spots, unfinished compromises becoming normal, the danger of making excuses, creating environments where people feel safe to contribute ideas and why the best hosts never stop improving I also share: why I charge for the use of my Weber BBQ, how one guest’s frying-pan comment escalated into a six-hour refurbishment project, a simple shampoo dispenser idea that genuinely improved the guest experience and the hidden magnetic key-storage system suggested by one of my helpers that now saves endless wasted time   Superhost Secret “Listen to comments as sincere feedback: not as criticism — then take action as you see fit.” In this episode:   Why hosts become blind to their own systems The difference between criticism and constructive observation The psychology of psychologically safe environments How small improvements create big guest impressions Why good teams improve when everyone is allowed to contribute   Mentioned in this episode Weber BBQs The song The Gas Man Cometh by Flanders and Swann Airbnb private review feedback Hosting systems and operational blind spots   Webinar Invitation I’m now hosting regular webinars for anyone interested in becoming an Airbnb host or improving their current setup. If you’d like to hear more about how I turned my own home into a profitable income stream through hosting, there’s a Zoom registration link below in the show notes. Follow Neil Instagram: @SuperhostNeil And remember: Fresh eyes don’t weaken your systems… they strengthen them.     Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    15 min
  8. May 5

    #114. Managing a bad month

    What happens when bookings suddenly drop—after years of consistency? I share how I navigated my worst month in five years—and how I made sure it didn’t turn into a financial problem. If you’ve ever worry about a dip in bookings, this episode will help you stay calm, in control, and on track. April 2026 was inexplicably quiet. Economic uncertainty, platform changes, seasonal shifts, or even local redundancies… it could have been any of these. The key takeaway: A bad month can feel like failure—but it’s usually just variance.  The #1 Important Tool: Cashflow Forecasting Stay in control of your business - as you know what money is coming in, what’s going out, and when—day by day.  With a simple spreadsheet (or even pen and paper), you can: Track all incoming bookings  Map out all known expenses  See your future bank balance every single day  Spot problems before they happen  Think of it like navigating a boat: You are here & rocks are there  Your job is simply to steer  My Cashflow System setup is simple: Date, Money in, Money out, Running total  Key habits: Daily Update, Reconcile it with your bank account, Add bookings when they’re made. Remove them if guests cancel - This gives you total visibility—and removes financial stress. Stop Judging Performance Month-by-Month Instead of reacting emotionally to one bad month: Look at a rolling 3–6 month average. This smooths out the highs and lows and gives you a true picture of performance. Build a Financial Buffer; Having a small, instant-access savings buffer (£500–£1,000) can make a huge difference. Not for interest—but for peace of mind. It stops a bad week becoming a crisis.  Multiple Income Streams Matter. Airbnb (general public), Regular returning guests, Corporate bookings. When one dips, another can carry you. Speed = Bookings. One of the simplest ways to increase bookings: Respond immediately Guests often book the 1st suitable option—don’t lose out by being slow. Always Be Ready: Last-minute bookings happen. If your room isn’t ready, you miss the opportunity. Aim to have every room ready by early afternoon, every day. Understand Your Demand Pattern - It’s not always weekends that matter. For me, Tuesdays and Wednesdays are the busiest Once you know your peak days, you can optimise for them. Maximising Demand (Creative Strategies) To increase capacity during peak days: Install a fold-down bed for trusted regulars  Partner with a neighbour for overflow bookings. Even when I don’t earn from those bookings, I protect the relationship—and the guest comes back When bookings dropped, focus only on what you can control: Respond instantly; Keep rooms ready; Maximise peak days  And importantly… don’t panic and slash prices. Superhost Secret; Create a clear system to forecast your cashflow so you always stay in control of your finances. Limerick of the Week A host mapped his cash well ahead,  So he saw where his balance turned red,  He used his skill,  To shift a large bill,  And kept his small business well-fed. Want to Learn More? Join one of my live webinars to learn how to start and grow your own Airbnb income: click on the link in the show notes below. Follow me for tips and behind-the-scenes hosting life: Instagram @SuperhostNeil Final Thought With the right systems in place, a bad month isn’t a disaster—it’s just part of the journey.   Register for my next FREE webinar on how to monetize your own home, here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/61WTjBMhTF2MPCh_WrcMbA  If you’re enjoying the show, hit follow and leave a review — it helps more people find it!

    16 min
5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Welcome to The Airbnb Superhost, your ultimate guide to mastering the art of hosting on Airbnb.  In each episode, lasting about 15 minutes, Neil will reveal the secrets to creating unforgettable guest experiences and maximizing the potential of your property, drawing on over 10 consecutive years as a qualifying Airbnb Superhost and hosting over 2000 guests from over 40 countries. With a focus on 3 specific aspects of running an Airbnb business; the host, the property, and Airbnb itself, Neil provides step-by-step guidance on everything from ambiance creation to effective communication. In each episode, a Superhost Secret will help you elevate your hosting game and keep guests coming back for more. Whether you're a seasoned host or just starting out, Neil’s actionable tips and tricks will help you become a hospitality superstar. Disclaimer: The Airbnb Superhost is in no way affiliated with Airbnb. All ideas, thoughts, concepts and data presented in this podcast are entirely Neil’s own and do not represent the views of Airbnb. 

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