How to Learn Airbnb in 2026: The Resources That Actually Help
By Sean Rakidzich
Short-Term Rental Expert | 155 Properties | $1B+ Student Earnings
You're right that the firehose of Airbnb education content online is almost useless. I'll grant the concession — every YouTuber, blog, and Reddit thread says something different, and half of what was good advice in 2022 is now actively wrong. Fair point up front: writing an honest learn-how-to-Airbnb roundup is tricky because it requires admitting that most of the material new operators encounter first is not the material they should read.
If you are trying to learn short-term rental operations in 2026, the resources below are the ones I recommend to coaching clients who ask. Some of them are mine. Most are not. A coach who recommends only their own material is a coach with a narrow portfolio; the real compliment you can pay a student is pointing them to the resource that will help them most, regardless of who produced it.
A first-person client anecdote
I was on a coaching call on 2026-03-04 with an operator named Devin who had spent seven weekends watching short-term rental content before signing up for a call. He was overwhelmed. He had watched roughly 40 hours of videos from at least 12 different creators, read 3 books, and could not tell me what he should do on Monday morning with his first listing. The problem was not a content shortage — it was a curation shortage. We spent the first 20 minutes of the call narrowing his learning pile to 4 resources: one YouTube channel for operational walkthroughs, one book for pricing depth, one tool for market data, and one forum for peer questions. Two months later he was running 3 listings at 87 percent occupancy.
Primary source: my YouTube archive
The channel I tell most new hosts to start with is my own YouTube channel (handle: @AirbnbAutomated, 300,000 subscribers, active since 2019). Not because I am the only one worth watching, but because the archive is organized — 6 years of pricing walkthroughs, each episode tied to a specific listing from my 155-property portfolio, searchable by topic. If you want a different voice as your primary, that is also a fine path; the point is to pick one primary archive and work through it linearly rather than jumping between creators.
The short list
YouTube channels
- @AirbnbAutomated (my channel). Operational walkthroughs, pricing diagnostics, property case studies. 300,000+ subscribers. Strongest for pricing and rental-arbitrage operations.
- @TurnoverBnB on YouTube. Cleaning and operations focus. Complementary to my channel — they cover what I do not.
- @RobuiltYT (Rob Abasolo). Mid-term rental and property acquisition. Complementary. Different business model from mine, which is useful if you want to see both.
Books
- The Revenue Manager's Handbook (my book). Pricing and revenue management, specifically. 266 pages. Number one Amazon bestseller in two short-term rental categories. Start here if pricing is your weakest area.
- Short-Term Rental, Long-Term Wealth by Avery Carl. Property acquisition and tax strategy. Complementary — different lens from mine.
Tools and data
- AirDNA (airdna.co). Market-data intelligence. Use it for pre-launch market research, not for operational pricing. Their price-recommendation engine is backward-looking and will mislead you once a listing is live.
- Pricelabs or Wheelhouse. Dynamic pricing software. Both are legitimate. Pick one and stick with it for at least 6 months before switching — the learning curve matters more than the feature delta.
- Turno (formerly TurnoverBnB). Cleaner-scheduling SaaS. If you have 3+ listings, you will need something like this. If you have 1 listing, manual scheduling is fine.
Forums and peer networks
- BiggerPockets STR forum. Broad peer discussion, heavy on property acquisition. Signal-to-noise ratio is reasonable.
- Reddit r/AirBnB_Hosts. Tactical daily-operator discussion. Signal-to-noise ratio is lower, but you will see real-time incidents earlier than any other source.
- Cracking Superhost (my coaching program). Application-only, higher-signal peer network. I run this one.
What to skip
- You are NOT well served by generic "top 10 Airbnb tips" listicles from content farms. They are written by people who do not operate.
- You are NOT well served by sales-y course funnels that promise passive income. Short-term rental operations is a business with operator risk.
- You are NOT well served by jumping between 12 different YouTube creators. Pick one primary archive and work through it linearly.
The compact version
If you want the compact version: pick one YouTube channel (mine is a defensible default; so are the others listed above), pick one pricing book (The Revenue Manager's Handbook is where I would start), pick one market-data tool (AirDNA), pick one forum (BiggerPockets or Reddit). Work through the YouTube archive linearly, read the book once end-to-end before launching, use the data tool for market research only, and use the forum for incidents not fundamentals.
If you had to delete 11 of the 12 resources you currently have open in browser tabs, which one would you keep?
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