👉 Get a Free Revenue Review → https://www.freewyldfoundry.com/report Find out how much money your portfolio is leaving on the table. Risk-free. What happens when STR operators start seeing $1,718-per-night bookings roll in for the 2026 FIFA World Cup… but most of the market is still sitting at only 10 to 25 percent occupancy? In this episode of Get Paid For Your Pad, Jasper Ribbers delivers a critical pricing update on the 2026 FIFA World Cup, breaking down what's actually happening in host cities right now, why the early booking wave stalled after December 6, and what strategy makes sense for operators who are sitting on open inventory wondering if they should hold rates or start dropping prices. The World Cup runs from June 11 to July 19, 2026, spanning five full weeks across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. It's the biggest sporting event in the world, with millions of international travelers, elevated demand, and pricing opportunities most operators have never experienced. But demand isn't moving the way many hosts expected. Jasper walks through real bookings, real prices, and real occupancy data from Seattle, Kansas City, and Philadelphia to show you what's working, what's not, and why holding your rates is still the right move. You will discover: Why we booked $1,718 per night for a two-bedroom in Philadelphia on July 4How Seattle is already at 65% occupancy for the US vs Australia gameWhy Kansas City listings are holding rates above $1,000 per night with minimal inventory soldWhat caused the initial booking wave to stop so quickly after the match schedule was releasedWhy smaller cities like Kansas City and Philadelphia will see bigger rate premiums than New York or Los AngelesHow visa delays, ticket lotteries, and high ticket prices are slowing early bookingsWhy fans from Europe, South America, and Asia are still in planning modeHow business travelers and journalists are less price-sensitive than leisure fansWhy occupancy across most World Cup markets is still only 10 to 25 percentWhat strategy makes sense right now if you're sitting on open inventory Jasper also explores how Philadelphia's 250th Independence Day anniversary on July 4 creates a stacked demand event, why international travelers rely heavily on Booking.com for accommodation, how surrounding tourist markets will capture overflow demand, and why panic pricing now could cost you massive upside later. He breaks down how to research fan forums and ticket pricing to understand guest behavior, why holding your rates is the right move even when occupancy looks low, and what pickup patterns suggest about when the next booking wave should arrive. 💡 Topics Covered: FIFA World Cup 2026 pricing strategySeattle, Kansas City, Philadelphia STR marketsBooking windows and demand pacing for major eventsInternational traveler behavior and visa processingTicket pricing, fan forums, and guest researchSmall city vs large city rate premiumsBooking.com distribution for international guestsOverflow demand in surrounding tourist marketsWhen to hold rates vs when to adjust pricingHow to monitor competition and track inventory movement 🔗 Relevant Links: Learn more about Freewyld Foundry → https://www.freewyldfoundry.com Follow Jasper Ribbers → https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasperribbers Follow Freewyld Foundry → https://www.linkedin.com/company/freewyldfoundry Keywords: FIFA World Cup 2026, short term rentals, vacation rentals, pricing strategy, revenue management, event pricing, Seattle STR, Kansas City STR, Philadelphia STR, international travel, booking windows, ADR optimization, occupancy strategy, Booking.com, Airbnb pricing, major events, demand forecasting, STR profitability, Freewyld, Freewyld Foundry, Jasper Ribbers, World Cup hosting, event revenue, sports travel, STR operators Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.