Make Money Renting Out Extra Space in Your Home
Are you a homeowner? Have you ever considered making extra money sharing your space? These ideas aren’t for everyone, but might be a perfect source of extra cash for you. As much as $4k a month!
by Debra Karplus
Your mother told you never take rides with strangers, but that shuttle to the airport was an Uber. You took a ride with a stranger and it felt safe.
Your mother also told you to never allow strangers into the house, but you’ve just discovered a house on your block is sometimes utilized as a vacation rental. You talk to these neighbors and learn that they use their home as a bed and breakfast and find it to be fun, interesting, safe, easy, and lucrative.
Extra money is always nice to have. Maybe you should use your college-bound son’s bedroom for travelers to rent. You could even rent out your entire house when you are away. Sound like a good idea? Read on to learn more about making money renting out extra space in your home:
Using Your Home as a Vacation Rental for Making Extra Money
Look on Airbnb.com, and you’ll discover that since 2007, regular folks like you have been making hundreds of dollars renting out their space to travelers worldwide. Whether you have a room, a small cottage or livable structure on your property, a log home, a tree house, an apartment, a condo, or any other living arrangements, vacationers seek accommodations like yours.
One woman in her thirties bought a charming old home in a college town built in 1907. To her surprise, her landlord would not let her out of her current lease, putting her in a financial dilemma, especially as property taxes became due. Her friend suggested she rent out her new place.
She bought seven beds for the three bedrooms, an inexpensive television, and a few tables and started renting the 1500-square-foot abode for $125 a night (this was in 2017). During Mother’s Day weekend, a popular film festival and graduation weekend, she always books the place. She has the potential to earn over $4,000 monthly. Her only costs have been the one-time purchase of furnishings and the ongoing washing of sheets and towels and providing inexpensive breakfast foods, such as orange juice, coffee and dry cereal. She has had 100% satisfied guests. In fact, her online reviews are 5-star. She continues to rent a place and uses the house she bought to generate revenue.
You deserve a comfortable retirement.
That's why our weekly newsletter, After 50 Finances, is dedicated to people 50 years and older.
Each week we feature financial topics and lifestyle issues important to the 50+ crowd that can help you plan for and enjoy a comfortable retirement even if you haven't saved enough.
Subscribers get The After 50 Finances Pre-Retirement Checklist for FREE!
Sign up today for your comfortable retirement.
We respect your privacy. We hate spam. Unsubscribe at any time.
What About Safety?
Services such as Airbnb and its growing number of competitors all have a mutual screening system on their sites.
Hosts put up a photo of themselves, first name and a short profile. Guests also write a profile about themselves with a picture, and upon request, they need to provide identification like a state driver’s license to prove that they are who they say they are. Also, both hosts and guests have the opportunity to rate each other after the stay.
If potential hosts and guests read these public reviews online, they will have a reasonably good idea of who they will be sharing living quarters.
Before Renting Out Your Unused Space To Make Extra Cash
It’s probably a really good idea to first contact your city and county officials and see if you need to register this as a business. You also want to make sure you are in compliance with all zoning regulations. Additionally, you want to contact the company that provides your homeowners insurance and inform them of your desire to use your space as a rental.
If your municipality and your insurance company are onboard with the use of your property as a rental, then you want to get on some sites like Airbnb.com and read and re-read very carefully to make sure this is what you want to do.
Once ready, you can list your property online. Start with a description of the inside, the outside, and any amenities, such as walking distance to downtown, on a bus line, gated community, or use of swimming pool. You will also want to describe yourself. As far as photos, you need a good one of you, and more important, you need several pictures of the inside and outside of the space that potential guests will use. The site will give you guidelines for setting a price and house rules. Also, you will need to determine availability. Maybe you just want to rent your place certain days of the week, months or seasons.
Remember you are a business, and the site that you use will send you a tax statement at year-end to report all your earnings.
If you are comfortable sharing your living space with strangers, renting out rooms in your home can be a great way to meet interesting people while making money.
Reviewed July 2024
About the Author
Debra is an occupational therapist, accountant, teacher and freelance writer. She is a writer for Advance for Occupational Therapy Practitioners. She also writes for Grand Magazine, has some items (fiction and non fiction) selling on Amazon (Kindle), has written several travel articles for the Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette and several articles for freelancewriting.com and volunteers as a money mentor for the University of Illinois Cooperative Extension money mentoring program. Learn more about her at DebraKarplus.blogspot.com.
Sign me up for a comfortable retirement!
Every Thursday we’ll send you articles and tips that will help you enjoy a comfortable retirement. Subscribers get a free copy of the After 50 Finances Pre-Retirement Checklist.
We respect your privacy. We hate spam. Unsubscribe at any time.
Popular Articles
- Comparing Retirement Housing Options
- How We Retired With Almost No Savings
- How Retirees Can Live on a Tight Budget
- 9 Things You Need to Do Before You Retire
- What You Need to Know About Long Term Care Insurance Before You Retire
- You Didn’t Save Enough for Retirement and You’re 55+
- Could Debt Derail Your Retirement? A Checklist
- Your Emergency Fund In Retirement: A Comprehensive Guide
- Managing Your 401k In Your 50s