Short term rentals Dublin 2022

11 comments
  1. Wonder what happens if you join the dots, what end of the market are they serving ?

    Does temporary/short term lets give more profit ?

    Does it make it easier to keep a flow of people coming and going, never truly settling in one place, going from job to job, country to country. I was always told people need stability, what happens to people who don’t have stability ?

  2. I don’t think I fully understand.

    What are people mad about here?

    Is it that some people are choosing to rent their property for short term Airbnb rather than lease based long term rentals?

    The room v.s home are 45% 55%.

    The quantity of Air BnN rentals has dropped close to 60% from over 8,000 at the end of 2019 to 2,700 now.

    33% of the properties have a min stay of only 1 night.

  3. This reminds me of the recent Business Ears podcast on Air BnB vs NYC. Same argument in that apartments are getting too expensive as many are being taken out of the market to put on Air BnB.

    Is an interesting listen:
    https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9yc3MuYXJ0MTkuY29tL2J1c2luZXNzLXdhcnM/episode/Z2lkOi8vYXJ0MTktZXBpc29kZS1sb2NhdG9yL1YwL2VtOWFUOW9PeUFXUGxocFZIR1d2b3ZHZkpMWl92Rm5Tb3VldEdaRXQ0eGM?ep=14

    Spoiler alert – it’s still ongoing and nobody’s happy!

  4. OP did you get this off [insideairbnb.com](https://insideairbnb.com)? If you filter by entire home and recently booked, there is a mere 386 short term lets in the entire county of Dublin.

    It is a bit disingenuous using old stats to make out that there are multiples of airbnbs in 2022, when most of them disappeared during the pandemic.

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