
Bed-Level Pricing Strategies: 5 Patterns That Work in Coliving
Most coliving operators price by room type, single, double, triple. This leaves money on the table. The same bed can be worth £100/month more than another in the same room based on attributes residents actually pay for. This guide covers 5 bed-level pricing patterns that can lift RevPAB by 8-15% without harming occupancy.
Pattern 1: Premium Attribute Pricing
Specific bed attributes command price premiums: Window beds (10-15% premium over interior beds in the same room), Lower bunks (5-10% premium over upper bunks), Beds nearer to ensuite bathrooms (5% premium), Larger beds in mixed-size rooms (where the room contains a mix of single and double beds). These are real preferences residents express in surveys; pricing them captures willingness-to-pay you're already leaving on the table. Requires per-bed inventory management to even be possible.
Pattern 2: Time-of-Stay Pricing
Long-stay residents in coliving subsidize short-stay flexibility. Pattern: charge 100% rate for 1-month stays, 92% for 3-month commitments, 85% for 6-month, 78% for 12-month. Some operators flip this, charge premium for short-stays to capture flex-living premium. Either works; pick one. Don't run flat pricing across all stay lengths, you're either undercharging short-stays or overcharging long-stays. Test which direction works in your market by running 3-6 months at each strategy.
Pattern 3: Demand-Adjusted Pricing
Beds that have been vacant for 14+ days should drop in price. This isn't 'discounting', it's market signaling that the bed isn't moving at the current price. Implementation: drop 5% at 14 days vacant, another 5% at 21 days, another 5% at 28 days. Most beds fill before the second cut. The system should also raise prices on beds that fill instantly, if you list a bed and have an application within 2 hours, you priced too low. Raise the next similar bed 5%. Revenue management modules automate this with rules-based pricing.
Pattern 4: Housemate-Adjusted Pricing
When a 4-share room has 3 popular, well-matched residents and one open bed, that open bed is worth 10-20% more than the same bed in a problematic-housemates room. This is controversial but operationally true. Tactically: don't advertise the price differential publicly, but adjust the asking rate based on housemate desirability. The 'good housemates' room can hold its rate longer; the 'difficult housemates' room may need a discount to fill. This pattern requires honest assessment of your existing residents and is best applied conservatively.
Pattern 5: Inclusive vs Stripped-Down Pricing
Same bed, two pricing tiers: Standard (rent + utilities + wifi + 1 community event/month) and Inclusive (standard + cleaning + meal plan + gym + unlimited events) at +£150-250/month. Some residents pay for the bundled experience; others want the bare minimum. Pricing this way captures both segments. Common variant: charge stripped-down base rate, then upsell add-ons (parking, gym membership, meal plan) per resident. Payments modules handle the billing complexity.
Implementation Sequence
Don't try all 5 patterns simultaneously. Sequence: Month 1, Implement Pattern 1 (premium attributes). Easiest, lowest risk. Month 2-3, Add Pattern 2 (time-of-stay tiers). Month 4-6, Implement Pattern 3 (demand-adjusted) once you have data. Month 6+, Test Patterns 4 and 5 selectively. Track RevPAB and occupancy weekly. If RevPAB rises but occupancy drops, you've gone too aggressive. The goal is 8-15% RevPAB lift with occupancy maintained or up.
Common Mistakes
(1) Across-the-board increases, operators panic about revenue and raise all prices 10%. Occupancy crashes within 60 days. Pricing should be granular, not uniform. (2) No data tracking, without per-bed RevPAB tracking, you can't see what's working. (3) Slow adjustment cycles, pricing reviewed quarterly is too slow. Monthly minimum, weekly for high-velocity properties. (4) Ignoring the 'lonely bed', beds that have been empty 30+ days need price action, not patience. Stale beds turn into 60-day vacancies fast.
Per-Bed Pricing Built In
JumboTiger's revenue management module supports per-bed pricing with all 5 patterns out of the box.
Book a DemoFinal Thoughts
Bed-level pricing isn't optional sophistication, it's the operational reality of coliving. Operators who price by room type are leaving 8-15% revenue on the table. Operators who price by bed with multiple patterns capture the willingness-to-pay residents already have. Implement gradually, track RevPAB and occupancy together, and adjust monthly. Within 6-12 months, expect material RevPAB gains.
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