Pricing intelligence
Stop losing the easy money.
Every awkward gap in your calendar is money sitting on the table. Revenue IQ scores each one against your own bookings — not generic market data — and tells you what to charge to fill it. The more history Daybook has, the sharper the prompt.
Open your Daybook — it's freeFree to start · no card · upgrade when it earns its keep
Your gaps, scored
RevenueIQ looks at every gap of 3+ nights and compares it against the same period in previous years. High demand historically? That gap gets a higher suggested rate. Low demand? It tells you what floor to set before you start discounting.
The suggestion isn't a guess — it's derived from what you actually earned, when your guests actually booked.
Export your booking history as a CSV from Airbnb or Booking.com — one upload to Daybook and it's done. Takes under a minute and you only need to do it once per platform.
You'll still get gap scoring from day one — Daybook uses whatever history you have. The month-by-month comparison gets sharper with each passing year as your own data builds up. The longer you use it, the smarter it gets.
Month by month
RevenueIQ compares the same month across every year in your data. Three bad Mays in a row isn't bad luck — it's a pattern you can price around. Three strong Augusts means you should hold rate, not discount.
See January 2023, 2024 and 2025 side by side. Not averaged — year by year, so you can see whether things are improving.
High nights, low revenue means you were filling it cheap. Low nights, high revenue means you held rate but sat empty. Both are fixable.
Strongest months: December, August, July. Weakest: May, November, January. Not a chart you have to interpret — a conclusion you can act on.
What it actually says
Revenue IQ doesn't try to tell you what every property in the market is worth. It looks at what you've earned in similar periods, what a gap is worth chasing, and what to try.
Calm, not constant
Revenue IQ surfaces gaps worth attention and suggests what to try. You make the change in Airbnb. No automated repricing, no opaque "AI optimisation," no risk that your rate moves while you sleep.
It's designed for hands-on hosts who want a practical prompt — not a black box.
Where it shows up
Revenue IQ works best alongside today's operations. Pricing prompts appear in the Daily View — same screen as cleaner confirmations and guest signals — so you see them when you're already looking. On busy operational days, they collapse behind a "Look ahead" toggle so they don't compete with today's tasks.
FAQ
No. Revenue IQ never changes your prices. It surfaces gaps worth pricing and suggests what to try. You make the change in Airbnb (or wherever you list). The decision stays with you.
For the deepest comparisons (same week across previous years, month-by-month trends), yes — one CSV export from Airbnb or Booking.com per platform. Takes under a minute and you only do it once. Without it, Daybook can still flag gaps from your live calendar; the historical confidence just isn't there yet.
Revenue IQ uses what you have. With one year, it'll compare current gaps to the same week last year — useful but lower confidence. The signal sharpens automatically as your second and third years build up.
Daybook still flags awkward gaps from your live calendar — three or more empty nights, weekend stragglers, gaps right before bank holidays. The pricing intelligence improves as your data grows.
No. Never. Daybook never logs into Airbnb on your behalf and never moves a rate. Suggestions only.
Yes. Tap dismiss and it doesn't come back for that gap. If you ignore a gap that stays empty too long, the urgency rises so you don't forget it — but you can dismiss again if you've decided to leave it.
CSV history from Airbnb and Booking.com today. Live gap detection works from any iCal feed — Airbnb, Booking.com, VRBO and direct calendars.
Connect your calendars and upload your booking history. Daybook will start scoring your gaps tomorrow morning. No card.
Open your Daybook — it's freeFree to start · no card · upgrade when it earns its keep