Despite a concerted effort from hotel lobbyists, affordable housing advocates and governments around the world to shut it down, Airbnb just started to turn a profit.
The short-term rental startup became profitable for the first time in the second half of 2016, Bloomberg reported, citing sources close to the company. Airbnb expects to remain profitable in 2017 before interest, taxes and amortization, according to the publication.
The company takes a commission of between 6 percent and 12 percent from guest fees, and charges hosts a small fee. It has no expenses for cleaning and maintaining properties, and the company’s revenue increased more than 80 percent last year. The company still has nearly all of the $3.1 billion in funding it raised and it is looking for make investments and acquisitions, Bloomberg sources said.
In October, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed a bill into law that raised the fine for hosts with illegal Airbnb listings up to $7,500. It recently settled a lawsuit it filed against the city of the new law.
Attorneys in San Francisco are reportedly hiring private investigators to uncover illegal short-term rentals. Those lawyers work for tenants who claim they were wrongly forced out of their apartments so that their landlords could list the properties on Airbnb.
Affordable housing advocates have argued Airbnb drives up rents in New York City. Analysis from The Real Deal in 2015 found the startup pushed up rents as much as $69 per month in neighborhoods such as Williamsburg and Greenpoint. [Bloomberg] — Miriam Hall