Index:
Criteria
Are all rental listing sites created equal? Of course not, but from the perspective of a property manager, the question is a little different.
Instead of looking for the listing sites with the most traffic, you’ll also want to weigh a few other factors in. Things like booking commissions, ease of use (UI & UX), compatibility with software, and target markets. At Tokeet, our main concern is short-term rentals (vacation rentals).
All of these things were taken into account whilst forming this list – along with popularity too. If you’re a short-term rental manager, these are the sites you want to be seen on. So, without further hesitation, here are the top 10 best rental listing sites:
The Top 10 Best Rental Listing Sites
| Site | URL | |
| 1 | ![]() | Airbnb.com → |
| 2 | ![]() | Booking.com → |
| 3 | ![]() | Expedia.com → |
| 4 | ![]() | Agoda.com → |
| 5 | ![]() | HomeAway.com → |
| 6 | ![]() | TripAdvisor.com → |
| 7 | ![]() | FlipKey.com → |
| 8 | ![]() | HolidayLettings.com → |
| 9 | ![]() | HouseTrip.com → |
| 10 | ![]() | Wimdu.com → |
Should you be listing your property on all of these?
Yes. That’s the short answer. If you’re a full-time rental manager with multiple properties to keep occupied, you’ll want to have as much exposure as possible.
If you just have one property, you may do just fine with one channel. You’d be in the minority though if you put your property on Airbnb and had instant, everlasting success. Starting out with a strategy that involves multiple rental listing sites will ensure you start seeing action sooner and encounter fewer dead spots.
Of course, you’ll want a software solution to tie all these channels together. This article isn’t about Tokeet’s ability to synchronize and manage all of the best rental listing sites, though. Let’s focus on the benefits of running your property on multiple channels instead:
Why Listing Your Property on Multiple Channels is a Great Investment
1. Increased exposure to more users.

The best rental listing sites (listed above) are the ones that have proven success in reaching people. It’d be a shame to miss out on all those extra eyes.
2. Insurance against unexpected decrease in popularity of one site.

Are all the channels listed above successful? Can they all bring a ton of new booking possibilities to your rental property operation? Yes and yes. But no one can account for a company’s ability to always remain ahead of the competition. Especially in a field as competitive as this one. When one channel loses users, another picks them up. It’s best to be on both.
3. Different rental listing sites, different markets.

4. You will benefit from channel competition.

If you’re only listing your property on one site, you could be missing out on the unique features, discounts, or included services of another. Take advantage of the various opportunities that different websites provide by listing your vacation property on as many as possible.
Clearly, listing your vacation property on a wide range of property websites is a great investment. It’s free exposure, more bookings, insurance against dead spots, and a jumpstart for anyone just getting started. And, with a little help from Tokeet, you’ll be able to manage all of these channels with ease.

Welcome to Tokeet’s Podcast — your trusted source for insights, trends, and strategies shaping the vacation rental industry. Each episode features expert interviews, data-driven analysis, and practical tips to help property managers grow their businesses, improve guest experiences, and stay ahead in a rapidly evolving market. Whether you’re new to short-term rentals or managing a large portfolio, tune in to stay informed and inspired.
Vacation rental compliance is no longer a side checklist.
It now sits inside the booking journey, from guest data collection to identity verification, local reporting, e-invoicing, and access control.
In this episode, we look at where manual compliance breaks first: inboxes, reminders, copied guest details, and disconnected tools.
The point is not more software.
The point is fewer missed steps because each compliance action is tied to the booking event that requires it.
For growing operators, that is the shift from memory-based compliance to workflow-based compliance.
Key Takeaways:
✅ Compliance tasks now happen across the guest journey
✅ Manual workflows break when details sit in separate tools
✅ ID checks need visible status before arrival
✅ Reporting should trigger from booking or check-in events
✅ Automation works when it reduces missed steps, not when it adds work
Related Links:
Company: https://www.tokeet.com/
Blogs: https://www.tokeet.com/blog/
Blog: Vacation Rental Compliance Automation: Stop Missed Steps 👉https://blog.tokeet.com/vacation-rental-compliance-automation/
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit podcast.tokeet.com












