Skip to content
14 May 2026

How hosts can make a year’s income in a single month during the World Cup

Find out why demand around June 11th makes short-term rentals unusually lucrative and what hosts should do to capitalize

How hosts can make a year’s income in a single month during the World Cup

The upcoming FIFA tournament kicks off on June 11th, and for property owners on platforms like Airbnb, that date marks the beginning of a concentrated revenue window. With tens of thousands of visitors traveling from abroad, demand for accommodation spikes sharply, and some hosts are seeing nightly rates multiply by several times compared with typical months. For many, this event creates an opportunity to generate a disproportionate share of annual revenue in a compressed timeframe, turning what would normally be a steady trickle into a powerful surge.

Understanding how this market shift works starts with recognizing the profile of the crowd: international soccer supporters who often have inflexible travel dates and a willingness to pay premiums for proximity and convenience. That combination of constrained supply and elevated demand drives pricing power. Hosts who plan in advance can capture a large portion of that value, but the window for action is short and the stakes are real — both in terms of potential earnings and compliance with local regulations.

Why hosts can command steep rates

The economics are straightforward: a major sporting event compresses demand into a limited period, creating temporary scarcity of short-term lodging. During such peaks, standard pricing models are outpaced by market willingness to pay, allowing hosts to set premium nightly rates. Many visitors prioritize location, safety, and the match

Author

Camilla Pellegrini

Camilla Pellegrini, from Genoa and a former nurse, still recounts the night spent in the Sampierdarena emergency room when the decision was made to turn clinical experience into educational content. In the newsroom she supports a rigorous approach and carries postcards and notes from real shifts.