'They're basically running hotels': Property management companies Airbnb's biggest winners - Action News
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'They're basically running hotels': Property management companies Airbnb's biggest winners

A small number of commercial property managers generate a majority of Airbnb's overall revenue, eating up available housing stock and driving up rents in Canada's three biggest cities, a new study concludes.

San Francisco-based Sonder lists 168 Montreal properties, mostly in Plateau-Mont-Royal, Ville-Marie

An empty apartment.
The McGill study found the Plateau-Mont-Royal and Ville-Marie boroughs are the most popular locations for rentals in Montreal. This photo shows one of the San Francisco-based Sonder property management company's listings in the Plateau neighbourhood. (Airbnb)

A small number of commercial property managers generate a majority of Airbnb's overall revenue, eating up available housing stock and driving up rent in Canada's three biggest cities, a new study from a McGill University professor concludes.

"Just 10 per cent of hosts account for a majority of the revenue and the nights booked onAirbnbconsistently in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal," said the study's lead author, DavidWachsmuth,a McGillprofessor ofurban planning,in an interview on CBC Montreal'sDaybreak.

The study, titled Short-term Cities: Airbnb's Impact on Canadian Housing Markets,will be published Tuesday.

"What we're seeing with short-term rentals is that the right of property owners to make money is trampling on the right of people to afford houses," Wachsmuth said.

Airbnb listings grow

Wachsmuth and his colleagues found that all three Canadian cities studied have seen a 50 per cent year over year increase in the number of listings onAirbnb most of thementire homes or apartmentsand not just rooms in occupied homes.

They looked at three years of data provided by theanalytics firm AirDNA, which offers data to users looking to increase their Airbnb success. The firm collected information on all public transactions, gathering about80 million data points.

Wachsmuth said it was the best information publicly available.

The right of property owners to make money is trampling on the right of people to afford houses.- David Wachsmuth, McGillUniversity professor

De facto hotels

Of the three Canadian cities, Montreal has the most active listings on Airbnb, because of the city's popularity with tourists.

In Montreal, the PlateauMont-Royal andVille-Marieboroughs have the most listings.

Wachsmuth and his team found thattwo or three per cent of the housing stock in thoseneighbourhoods is now beingrun by property management companies for short-term rentals.

"There's one in Montreal that has about 160 properties," said Wachsmuth. "They make a couple of million dollars a year onAirbnb,is our estimate."

"They're basically running hotels ...that are split across multiple apartments," he said.

According to Wachsmuth, the most listingsin Montreal are fromthe San Francisco-based property management companySonder, which also offers listings in Vancouver and across the U.S.

One Sonder property in the Plateau starts at $120 a night, for up to four people, while another loft space in the Plateau,which can accommodate up to 10 people, starts at $249 a night.

"Montreal has quite cheap rents which means that we found much more so than Toronto and Vancouverit's a lot easier to out-competethe amount of income you can earn as a landlord from a normal rental by listing on Airbnb," he said.

Airbnb responds

AirbnbdisputesWachsmuth'sfindings.

"The author of this study has a history of manipulating scraped data to misrepresentAirbnbhosts, the vast majority of whom aremiddle-class Canadian families sharing their homes to earn a bit of additional income to help pay the bills," wrote spokespersonLindseyScullyin anemailedstatement.

"Avery small percentage of the entire housing stock in Montrealis rented frequently enough toout-competea long-term rental, undercutting the author's baseless conclusions about housing units removed."

Airbnbsays more than80 per centof hosts on the site are sharing their primary residences and are doing so three to four nights a month to earn a little extra income.

3 simple strategies to regulate Airbnb

In December2015, the Quebec government passed Bill 67 to regulateshort-termrentals in the province.

People who regularly rent properties need to get a certificate from the province's tourism ministry, pay a lodging tax and advise their landlords that they will be renting to tourists.

The legislation also increased the number of provincial inspectors from two to 18 to help enforce the new rules.

But Waschmuth said theresearch showed the legislation hasn't had an impact in Montreal on short-term listings. He proposed three steps to regulate services like Airbnb:

  • Hosts should only be allowed to rent their primary residences, so no multiple listings.
  • No full-time rentals, that is no properties that solely exist to be rented on Airbnb.For example, Amsterdam caps rentals at60 days of the year, while London limits rentals to 90 days.
  • Airbnb and other short-term rental platforms need to be required to enforce their regulations themselves, because it will be too difficult for city inspectors to do that.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story referred to David Wachsmuth's report as a study by McGill University. In fact, Wachsmuth was commissioned to write the report by the B.C. Hotel Association, without the involvement of McGill University.
    Feb 05, 2024 7:38 PM ET

With files from Montreal's Daybreak