← Back to Feed

Airbnb Promised World Cup Would Overwhelm Hotels. 80% of Host City Hotels Say Otherwise.

Airbnb positioned itself as the essential overflow valve for FIFA 2026, projecting 382,000 guests and $3.6 billion in economic impact. The actual booking data from host city hotels tells a completely different story about who's really struggling to fill rooms.

Airbnb Promised World Cup Would Overwhelm Hotels. 80% of Host City Hotels Say Otherwise.

So Airbnb spent months lobbying Canadian cities to loosen short-term rental regulations ahead of the World Cup, arguing that hotels simply couldn't handle the demand. They projected 382,000 guests, $210 million in host earnings across 16 cities, and positioned themselves as the critical infrastructure that would prevent some kind of accommodation crisis. The pitch was straightforward... hotels will be overwhelmed, you need us, get out of our way.

Here's what actually happened. Approximately 80% of hotels across the 11 U.S. host cities are reporting bookings below initial forecasts. Not slightly below. Below enough that some hotels are cutting rates. And Airbnb hosts? Many of them are also cutting rates after listing at prices 157% to 878% above pre-tournament levels and discovering that demand at those numbers doesn't exist. Some hosts are doing something worse... canceling early bookings to relist at inflated prices, which is essentially teaching the guest that your platform can't be trusted. That's not a marketplace functioning well. That's a marketplace eating itself.

Look, I've watched this exact dynamic play out with every major event for the last decade. The pattern is always the same. STR platforms project massive demand shortfalls to justify regulatory loosening. Hosts price like they're selling water in a desert. Actual demand comes in softer than the projections (because projections from companies lobbying for deregulation are... projections from companies lobbying for deregulation). And then everyone... hotels AND hosts... ends up competing on price in a market that was supposed to be undersupplied. The cancellation arbitrage piece is new, though, and it's ugly. AirROI data showing rate gaps of up to 878% between initial bookings and current asking prices means guests who booked early and got canceled are now being told the same room costs nine times more. That's not dynamic pricing. That's bait-and-switch with a tech veneer.

The Canadian regulatory angle is actually the more interesting story here. Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Ottawa... they've all maintained or strengthened principal-residence requirements for STRs. Toronto temporarily bumped its Municipal Accommodation Tax to 8.5% through July 2026 specifically for the World Cup. B.C. implemented a provincial STR registry requiring hosts to display registration numbers on listings. These cities looked at Airbnb's "you need us" pitch and said, essentially, "we need housing more than we need your overflow capacity." And based on the booking data... they were right. The accommodation crisis Airbnb predicted didn't materialize. What materialized instead was a bunch of hosts who priced themselves out of the market and a bunch of hotels that had room to spare.

The real question for hotel operators isn't whether Airbnb "failed" at the World Cup. It's what this data means for every future event-driven demand spike in your market. If the biggest sporting event on the planet can't generate enough demand to fill both hotels AND inflated STR inventory simultaneously, then the "STRs will overwhelm us" narrative needs serious recalibration. The data says something uncomfortable for both sides... there's more accommodation supply in most major markets than anyone wants to admit, and events that are supposed to be demand windfalls are increasingly becoming pricing wars where everyone leaves money on the table. I talked to a revenue manager at a host-city property last month who told me she'd dropped her World Cup premium by 40% and was still seeing soft pickup. "We planned for Paris Olympics demand," she said. "We got a regular convention week with better TV ratings."

Operator's Take

If you're a GM or revenue manager in any market that hosts major events... sports, concerts, conventions... take this World Cup data and recalibrate your event pricing strategy now. The old playbook of jacking rates 200-300% for tentpole events is breaking down because STR supply has permanently expanded the accommodation ceiling in most markets. Pull your actual event-week performance from the last three major events in your city and compare achieved ADR against your initial pricing. If you're consistently discounting 30-40% from your opening ask, you're starting too high and training your revenue team to chase. This is what I call the Rate Recovery Trap... you set an aspirational rate, watch it sit, panic-cut to fill, and now the OTAs and your comp set have anchored lower. Price for the demand that actually shows up, not the demand the convention bureau promises. And if Airbnb or any STR platform comes to your city council arguing they need looser regulations for the next big event, forward this World Cup data to your local hotel association. The "hotels can't handle it" argument just lost its best case study.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: Airbnb
🌍 Canadian host cities (World Cup 2026) 📊 Hotel occupancy forecasting 📊 Revenue Management 🌍 U.S. host cities (World Cup 2026) 🏢 Airbnb 📊 FIFA World Cup 2026 📊 Short-term rental regulation
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.