Does Rezi quote nightly rates and availability?
How Rezi answers guest questions about open dates and pricing for short-term rentals.
For short-term rentals, Rezi can tell inquiring guests whether dates are open and quote pricing based on what you provide.
“Is it available and what does it cost?” is the first question every guest asks, and it’s also the moment most inquiries die when the answer takes hours to arrive. Rezi answers it in seconds at any hour, which is precisely when browsing guests are deciding between your cabin and the next tab over. The two halves of the answer come from two different places, and knowing which is which makes the system easy to keep accurate.
- Availability comes from your synced calendars, Rezi never offers a booked date
- Pricing comes from the rates you set in the building’s knowledge base or settings
- Rezi can point guests to your listing or booking link to complete the reservation
Availability: automatic, if your feeds are connected
The availability half maintains itself: once your Airbnb, VRBO, and other feeds are connected, Rezi checks the merged calendar before ever suggesting dates, honoring bookings from every platform, your manual blocks, and your minimum-stay rules. If the requested dates are taken, Rezi says so and can offer nearby open dates instead, often saving an inquiry that would otherwise bounce.
Pricing: as good as what you give it
The pricing half is yours to feed. Put your rate structure in the building’s knowledge base or settings the way you’d explain it to a human assistant: base nightly rate, seasonal ranges (“June-August $295/night, otherwise $195”), weekend premiums, cleaning fee, pet fee, deposit. Rezi composes quotes from exactly that, “3 nights in July would be $885 plus the $150 cleaning fee”, and never invents a number it wasn’t given. Vague inputs produce vague quotes, so the more concrete your rate facts, the more bookable the answers.
Keep rates current
If you use seasonal or dynamic pricing, keep the figures Rezi quotes up to date so guests don’t get a stale number.
Dynamic-pricing users (PriceLabs, Wheelhouse, and similar) face the staleness question most sharply, the true nightly price changes constantly, and Rezi quotes what you last wrote down. Two workable patterns: quote ranges (“typically $180-260 a night depending on season, exact price at booking”) and let the booking link carry the precise number, or update Rezi’s rate facts whenever you adjust your pricing bands. Most operators find ranges plus a booking link converts perfectly well.
From quote to booking
Rezi’s job ends with a confident quote and a clear next step: your Airbnb or VRBO listing link, or your direct-booking site, whichever you’ve provided. Keeping payment on the platform (or your booking engine) keeps the protections and workflow you already rely on. The full conversation, what was asked, what was quoted, lives in the Interactions view, useful when a guest later claims they were promised a different price, and a steady source of pricing-question intel about your market.
Can Rezi complete the booking and take payment itself?
Can Rezi negotiate or offer discounts?
What if a guest asks about dates partially available?
What if a guest asks about a fee I haven’t written down?
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