theworldismine13
God Emperor of SOHH
Airbnb: Opportunity or nuisance?
Airbnb: Opportunity or nuisance?
Airbnb: Opportunity or nuisance?
As Ryan Scott maneuvered his Infiniti through Ocean Beach to check in on one of his multiple vacation rentals, a “For Rent” sign caught his attention. He slowed the car and hungrily eyed the nondescript home.
“I’m looking at that sign and I’m thinking, that’s an opportunity that would do great as a short-term rental,” he said, grinning.
With a dozen San Diego dwellings he either owns or sublets, plus 10 more that he manages, Scott confesses that he has become addicted to the intoxicating short-term rental revenues he says his properties have been generating over the last few years. He’s become so enamored with the vacation rental market that he has even thought about one day quitting his lucrative day job at IBM to grow what is now a side business.
Like thousands of others, he’s capitalizing on e-commerce to monetize homes, apartments and condos for brief stays by travelers instead of catering to traditional renters on month-to-month or year-long leases.
“The reality is you’re leaving money on the table if you’re renting to a long-term tenant,” he said.
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INTERACTIVE MAP: Where are the most Airbnb rentals in the county?
Scott, 33, represents the extreme end of the continuum of short-term rental operators who are redefining the vacation rental industry via the home sharing economy popularized by HomeAway and online behemoth Airbnb, valued at $25 billion.
Owners of principal residences and second homes are using the platforms to help cover mortgage payments while still being able to house the occasional visiting relative. Retirees with wanderlust are making extra cash by filling their unoccupied properties while traveling the globe. Entrepreneurial renters have found a way to supplement their incomes with part-time tenants — with or without their landlords’ permission.
While tourist destinations like San Diego have for decades been a magnet for conventional vacation rentals, the enthusiastic embrace of 8-year-old Airbnb and the ease of using it and other online venues have led to unintended consequences.
Tensions have erupted in urban neighborhoods, most notably in beach areas, where homeowners complain about raucous parties that interrupt their sleep and strangers invading their communities week in and week out. Critics contend that short-term rentals — homes, apartments or granny flats — are eating into an already tight rental market. And the hotel industry at the national level has lobbied for heavier regulation of an industry that it believes is cutting into its market share.
RELATED: Home-sharing's impact on housing market
In San Diego County, listings on Airbnb have grown at least 60 percent annually over the last several years, according to a Union-Tribune analysis of data provided by Airdna, a Santa Monica research firm that tracks activity on the rental platform. HomeAway, which also operates VRBO.com, said it saw listings in the county increase 24 percent from 2013 to 2014 and 17 percent the following year.
In just the last year, some 3,900 Airbnb hosts in the city of San Diego welcomed 185,000 guests, the company said in a recently prepared report. Worldwide, the number of homes listed for rent on Airbnb has mushroomed to 2 million in more than 190 countries.
It’s a meteoric ascent from an idea that germinated in 2007 when two of the company’s founders rented out air mattresses in their San Francisco apartment during a design conference to help make the rent.
Airbnb executive David Owen rejects the notion that the company’s home sharing business is increasingly dominated by commercial landlords who are upending San Diego’s rental market and altering the character of residential communities.
“Since we have grown and matured, it’s safe to say an overwhelming majority of activity on our platform doesn’t fall into the category of the traditional vacation rental market, meaning second homes and investment properties operated for a substantial portion of the year,” said Owen, the company’s head of policy strategy. “Almost 70 percent of listings in the city of San Diego are rented fewer than 90 days per year.
“What’s been a problem for San Diego is that the law is unclear. Just adopting clear rules does have a significant effect on clearing up misconceptions but also change the behavior of the outliers, those problem cases. ... You can still have jerk neighbors who aren’t short-term rental users.”
While cities throughout San Diego County have adopted varying regulations governing such rentals, the city of San Diego still has nothing in its municipal code that clearly defines a short-term rental, although there are regulations that govern more traditional bed-and-breakfasts, board-and-lodging dwellings and rooming houses.
Some cities, like Santa Monica, New York and Berlin, have responded to the concerns by imposing sharp limitations on whole-home rentals, while many others are much more permissive.
More than a year after launching multiple public hearings in hopes of adopting specific rules, San Diego expects to formally revisit the matter this summer, which will no doubt once again draw standing-room-only crowds of vacation hosts squaring off against their critics.
In the meantime, homeowners in more heavily impacted neighborhoods say they have reached the boiling point, calling on the city to outlaw what they call “mini hotels” operating illegally in the city’s single-family neighborhoods.
“If I could convince my wife to move, I’d move in a heartbeat, and this is a home I worked for years to pay for,” said Pacific Beach resident Tom Coat, whose three-bedroom Craftsman home sits next door to a house that he says is rented much of the year to short-term visitors. He also helps lead a coalition of homeowners calling themselves Save San Diego Neighborhoods.
“The owner tries to screen his renters and work with me, but people are on vacation, they put the kids to bed, and crank up the hot tub. Our night sleep is gone. I never had this problem with long-term renters.”
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High-stakes investment
“The units are located in one of the best areas in Mission Beach and have their own patio that has a BBQ and seating area. You will be a three-minute walk to the beach/ocean, where you can relax in the sand, surf, or just enjoy the gorgeous sunset every night on the boardwalk.”
A block from Mission Bay, the triplex on Island Court is, as Ryan Scott puts it, “the one that started it all.”
His foray into short-term rentals started modestly about six years ago when he was frequently traveling internationally for his technology consulting job at IBM and decided to rent out his leased one-bedroom condo in downtown San Diego when he was away (“It wasn’t 100 percent in line with the HOA rules.”) He quickly discovered that he could equal, if not exceed, his $1,500 monthly rent.
Eager to purchase a home in San Diego that they could still rent to a long-term tenant in case they had to move, Scott and his then girlfriend initially looked at inland properties. Ultimately they settled on the beach because “surprisingly, it was a better idea to buy a million-dollar triplex close to the beach than a $400,000 duplex in North Park.”
This guy