How to find the best homestay booking sites
From holiday rentals to house swapping and couch surfing, book a bed at a great rate and protect your holiday savings.
Last updated: 1 May 2017
Accommodation can make up a fair chunk of the cost of your holiday, but
there are ways of keeping costs to a minimum, or even getting accommodation
for free. If you haven’t got your heart set on seeing chocolates on the
pillow every night, then a hotel alternative like holiday rental or a room
in a homestay could save you a lot of money.
On this page:
But there’s a plethora of house sharing, short-term accommodation and house
sitting sites online so use our guide to get value for money from the most
popular and some of the lesser-known sites.
Holiday rental sites
Airbnb
Airbnb.com.au is host to more than 3 million listings worldwide in over 65,000 cities and 191 countries. Accommodation includes entire houses, rooms, or shared rooms in private homes. The site lets prospective guests and hosts screen profiles, read reviews and references of each other, and confirm that each other’s phone numbers and social media profiles are verified by Airbnb.
Our guide to using Airbnb, which covers pricing, risks and refund and cancellation policies, found the average Airbnb rate was 10% to 25% cheaper than a hotel room in five cities world-wide.
Stayz
Stayz.com.au is a Sydney-based company considered part of the ‘HomeAway’
family of brands, which in turn is owned by the US conglomerate Expedia Inc. It lists more than 40,000 Australian holiday rental properties. The site
takes a hands-off approach when it comes to the management of properties,
relying on self-regulation by property managers.
Only email addresses verified as having been used to book with the property
can leave reviews and property managers can’t hide negative reviews.
Reviews are moderated for ‘inappropriate content’ but Stayz says it is has
no obligation to investigate truthfulness or accuracy of reviews or
responses from the property owners.
HomeAway
Another Expedia-owned site, HomeAway.com.au, along with its subsidiaries
(which include VRBO.com, VacationRentals.com and Stayz), boasts more than
1,000,000 listings of vacation rental homes in 190 countries. It claims to
be the only Australian holiday rental site to offer free protection against
internet fraud. If you’re scammed through one of their listings, they’ll
reimburse the rental fee up to $1000.
Flipkey
TripAdvisor-owned flipkey.com features more than 300,000 vacation homes and
rooms located in more than 11,000 cities throughout the world. They promise
that every property owner is verified by staff “to ensure you are only
dealing with nice and trusted people”.
It operates a Payment Protection Policy that reimburses you up to USD
$10,000 if you succumb to fraud, inaccessible or misrepresented properties booked through their payment platform.
Travelling Frogs
Travellingfrogs.com is an Australian owned and managed site launched in
2016. It generates revenue through an annual fee for property owners so
there are no commissions (for guests or owners) and no service charges.
Property owners set security bonds and variation or cancellation fees so check the property details before booking. There’s no user reviews on the site, so check reviews of the
properties on TripAdvisor.
Aura
In a market dominated by international behemoths, Aura.travel claims to be
the largest Australian-owned holiday rental site. It appears to operate on
a stripped back, no user reviews model with booking policies largely set by
the property manager.
While it’s a site for booking holiday houses, apartments and self-contained
short-term rentals, many of the sites we found in searches were hotels,
motor inns and bed and breakfasts.
Tripping
Where there are booking sites there are booking site aggregators. In the
world of hotel booking, aggregators such as HotelsCombined.com.au and
Trivago compare a range of booking sites at once saving you time trawling
through all the booking sites on the web for the best price.
Tripping.com performs a similar service for a range of holiday rental sites
such as HomeAway, Stayz, Flipkey, Booking.com and TripAdvisor and so lays
claim to being the “world’s largest search engine for vacation and
short-term rentals”.
House-sitting, swapping and couch surfing
Couch surfing
Haven’t got the dosh for a hotel, or prefer a more personal experience when
on the road? Couch surfing could be for you. The concept has been around
for a while, but it’s no longer confined to the kindness of friends or
relatives. Couchsurfing.org is a free online portal that connects couch
surfers to hosts around the world. Although the site offers verified
profiles and reviews of hosts and surfers, staying with strangers could
have its risks – some listings offer only “shared sleeping surfaces”, so be
careful when choosing your host.
House-swapping
And there’s always the good old house swap. From intervac-homeexchange.com,
which claims to be the original house exchange service, to homeexchange.com
and houseswapholidays.com.au among others, there are plenty of sites out
there to help set up the switcheroo.
House-sitting
Some people have trouble finding a trusted minder to look after their pets
and property when they go away – and sometimes those people live in very
nice places. If you’re responsible enough to keep pets and plants alive
(you’ll often need character references and a police check to prove it),
sites such as aussiehousesitters.com.au and happyhousesitters.com.au could
line you up to sit pretty in a free holiday house.
As we found in our guide to
house-sitting agencies, it’s usually free for homeowners while memberships for house-sitters
vary.
Related
Zoya Sheftalovich is a freelance journalist for CHOICE.
You can find her on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Zoya Sheftalovich is a freelance journalist for CHOICE.
You can find her on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Jodi Bird is the Managing Financial Content Editor at CHOICE. Previously at CHOICE, he worked as Travel project lead and as a Finance specialist.
Jodi has over 30 years experience in financial services, having worked with major banks such as CBA, Westpac and Credit Suisse. He enjoys breaking down complex consumer decisions into easy to understand steps and holding companies to account for failing their customers. He is regularly called upon for expert commentary by major broadcasters such as the ABC, SBS, and Channels 7, 9, and 10.
Jodi has a Bachelor of Commerce majoring in Economics from the University of Wollongong. He is RG146 compliance certified to provide general advice for General Insurance and is a Responsible Manager on CHOICE's Australian Financial Services License.
Find Jodi on LinkedIn.
Jodi Bird is the Managing Financial Content Editor at CHOICE. Previously at CHOICE, he worked as Travel project lead and as a Finance specialist.
Jodi has over 30 years experience in financial services, having worked with major banks such as CBA, Westpac and Credit Suisse. He enjoys breaking down complex consumer decisions into easy to understand steps and holding companies to account for failing their customers. He is regularly called upon for expert commentary by major broadcasters such as the ABC, SBS, and Channels 7, 9, and 10.
Jodi has a Bachelor of Commerce majoring in Economics from the University of Wollongong. He is RG146 compliance certified to provide general advice for General Insurance and is a Responsible Manager on CHOICE's Australian Financial Services License.
Find Jodi on LinkedIn.