For Vacation Rental & STR Owners

Prep Your Vacation Rental for a Photo Shoot That Books Nights.

A property prep guide for Airbnb, VRBO, and Booking.com owners — built around the way vacation rentals actually need to photograph. Read this before your shoot, or before you book one.

10 min read
Florida short-term rental focus
Updated May 2026
The Philosophy

Vacation rental prep is nothing like listing prep.

If you've ever sold a home, you've seen the standard photo prep checklist: depersonalize, declutter, hide the kids' toys, remove the family photos. Helpful for a buyer trying to imagine themselves in the space.

Vacation rental photography needs the opposite. Guests aren't trying to imagine their own furniture in the room — they're trying to imagine themselves on vacation in your space. The pillow on the lounger. The coffee already brewing. The board games stacked on the shelf for game night with the family.

That changes everything about how you prepare. The themed bedrooms, the curated coffee bar, the welcome book, the robes hanging in the closet — these aren't clutter. They're the product. The job of prep isn't to strip personality away; it's to stage the best version of check-in day for your dream guest.

The rest of this guide is built around that idea.

Listing Photography

Sells the space.

The buyer is evaluating layout, square footage, condition. The goal is a clean, neutral canvas they can mentally fill with their own life. Depersonalization is correct. Empty counters are correct. Family photos come down.

Vacation Rental Photography

Sells the experience.

The guest is evaluating a stay — the feeling of being there, what their morning looks like, where they'll have wine on the patio. The goal is a fully-realized, lived-in space that telegraphs comfort and quality. Personality stays. Welcome touches stay.

The Prep Timeline

Four phases. One great shoot.

Most properties are camera-ready with a clean turnover and a few thoughtful touches. This timeline keeps things simple without leaving anything out. Spread it over a few days — don't try to do it all morning-of.

Hands-on or hands-off — this works either way. Many vacation rental owners are local and prefer to handle every detail themselves. Plenty of others run their property remotely with a manager and turnover team doing the on-the-ground work. This guide is built to be shared. If you're hands-on, work through it yourself. If you're hands-off, forward it to whoever handles your turnovers — they'll know exactly what we need. The work is the same; the assignments are flexible.

01
2–3 Days Before
Curb & Exterior

First impressions of a vacation rental start before the front door — they start at the listing's cover photo, which is almost always the exterior, the pool, or the patio. Fresh landscaping, clean glass, and working ambiance lighting do most of the heavy lifting here. Knock these out a few days early so you're not scrambling.

  • Mow, edge, and blow the lawn
  • Pressure wash the driveway, walkway, and pool deck if needed
  • Replace any burned out bulbs — interior, exterior, and string lights
  • Test pool lights, patio lights, and landscape lighting after darkIf we're shooting twilight, every light matters in the final frame.
  • Skim the pool and refresh chemistry — clear water photographs better
  • Clean glass doors, sliders, and large exterior windows
PRO TIP

If your property has any signature outdoor amenity — a fire pit, hot tub, outdoor kitchen, putting green, beach setup — make sure it's set up as guests would experience it. Logs in the fire pit, hot tub cover off, drinkware out. We can't stage what isn't there.

02
Day Before
Full Turnover

Treat shoot day like check-in day for your highest-spending guest of the year. Whether you handle turnovers yourself or have a team, the day-before list is mostly about making sure nothing got skipped and the property is ready well in advance — not the morning of.

  • Make every bed with fresh linens, crisp pillows, and a folded throw at the foot
  • Hang or roll fresh towels in every bathroom — match the set
  • Empty all trash cans — interior and exterior
  • Clear personal items from previous guests or owner stays
  • Vacuum or mop high-traffic areas — fresh tracks photograph well
  • Empty the dishwasher and sink — leave a clean, dry kitchen
  • Hide hampers, cleaning supplies, and any maintenance items
03
Morning Of
Light Staging

This is the part most owners skip — and it's the difference between a clean property and a magnetic listing. Light staging takes 20–30 minutes and adds the lifestyle layer that makes guests stop scrolling.

  • Bowl of fresh fruit or simple flowers on the kitchen island or dining table
  • Style the coffee bar — clean machine, mugs out, beans visible
  • Fluff pillows, fold throws, straighten area rugs
  • Set the dining table — placemats, simple centerpiece, or wine glasses
  • Outdoor: angle chairs toward a focal point, set out drinkware if pool/patio
  • Wipe down outdoor furniture and arrange cushions neatly
  • Put hoses, yard tools, and bins out of sight
PRO TIP

Watch your favorite hospitality brand's Instagram for an hour. Notice the small touches — a folded napkin, a wine bottle on the counter, a book on the lounger. Those micro-moments are what convert browsers into bookers. We'll capture them if you set them up.

04
30 Min Before
Final Prep

Last steps. We'll arrive ready to work, and these final touches let us hit the ground running instead of spending the first 20 minutes opening blinds and turning on lamps.

  • Open every curtain and twist open the blinds throughout the home
  • Turn on every light — including small lamps and pool/patio lights
  • Turn off all TVs, computer monitors, and ceiling fans
  • Set the thermostat to a comfortable level — we'll be working 1–3 hours
  • Move all vehicles off the driveway and away from the front of the home
  • Take down any flags from the exteriorWind movement causes blur in long exposures.
  • If pets are on-site, secure them or take them with you for the shoot window
The Most Important Section

What to keep visible.

If you take one thing away from this guide, take this. The single biggest mistake vacation rental owners make is treating their property like a listing for sale. They strip out everything that gives the place its character — and end up with photos that look like every other rental on the platform.

✓ THESE ARE THE PRODUCT

Don't pack these away. They're the reason your property gets booked.

Unlike listing prep, vacation rental prep is about showing the experience guests will have. The thoughtful touches you've added are exactly what differentiate your property from the next one. They stay.

Want to see this in action?
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Division of Labor

What we handle so you don't have to.

The prep checklist above is your part. Everything else — the parts that actually require expertise, gear, and editorial eye — is on us. Here's what comes with every vacation rental shoot.

🎯

Calendar Coordination

We work flexibly with your guest calendar and your turnover team — but for the strongest results, we usually recommend blocking a brief window (often a single night) so the property can be staged and shot without time pressure. The right photos earn that block back in bookings many times over.

💡

Lighting & Color

Color-balanced HDR lighting tuned for warm, hospitality-grade tones — not the cold, oversaturated look that screams "real estate listing." Every frame edited individually.

🏠

Hospitality Staging

We tweak final positioning on-site — a pillow shifted, a chair angled, a glass repositioned. The micro-moves that turn a clean room into a sellable image.

🌅

Twilight & Aerial

Aerial drone (airspace permitting) and twilight photography are standard on every vacation rental shoot — no upcharge. Depending on package and weather, twilight comes through as a virtual day-to-dusk edit or a true on-site session. Pools, beachfront, and signature lighting always get shown in their best light.

📸

Detail Storytelling

Beyond room shots, we capture the small moments that justify the booking — the coffee setup, the linen texture, the local touches. The images that build trust before guests ever arrive.

🚀

Platform-Ready Delivery

Files sized and named for Airbnb, VRBO, Booking.com, your direct booking site, social, and ads. No reformatting, no resizing, ready to upload.

Shoot Day

What to expect when we arrive.

Many owners are hands-off and prefer to coordinate access via lockbox, smart lock, or property manager — and that works great. If you'd like to be on-site, you're welcome to be. We just ask that you're comfortable stepping aside while we work room by room — the cleaner the frames, the stronger the final images.

On-site time varies significantly by package. Smaller properties with standard photo coverage can wrap in as little as an hour, while our most expansive packages — twilight, aerial, detailed amenity storytelling, full hospitality treatment — can run a full day or even overnight for properties that warrant it. We'll give you a realistic time estimate when you book.

You'll have professionally edited images back within a week, sometimes faster. Each image is individually color-corrected, exposure-balanced, and tonally tuned for hospitality — not just bulk-processed.

FAQ

Common questions.

How long does a vacation rental photo shoot take?
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On-site time varies significantly by package. Smaller properties with standard photo coverage can wrap in as little as an hour, while expansive packages with twilight, aerial drone, and detailed amenity storytelling can run a full day or even overnight. We work flexibly around your guest calendar and may recommend blocking a brief window for the strongest results.

How far in advance should I book a vacation rental photo shoot?
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We recommend 2 to 4 weeks in advance, especially during Florida's high season. This gives time to coordinate with your guest calendar, schedule any deep cleaning, and pick a day with ideal light. Last-minute bookings are sometimes possible but availability is limited.

Should I be present during the photo shoot?
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Many owners are hands-off and let us coordinate access via lockbox, smart lock, or property manager — that works great. You're welcome to be on-site if you'd like, as long as you're comfortable stepping aside while we work room by room. The cleaner the frames, the stronger the final images.

Do I need to hire a professional cleaner before the shoot?
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Your standard turnover cleaning is usually enough. The property should be hotel-ready as if your best-rated guest were checking in. If your turnover team handles linens, towels, and surfaces well, the property is camera-ready. We don't move furniture or do deep cleaning during the shoot.

What's the difference between vacation rental photos and listing photos?
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Listing photography is built for buyers — the goal is showing space, layout, and potential. Vacation rental photography is built for guests — the goal is selling the experience, the lifestyle, and the feeling of being there. That changes everything: lighting, staging, lens selection, the level of detail captured, and how the property is prepared.

Should I leave decor and welcome touches for the photos?
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Yes. Your themed decor, coffee bar, welcome book, board games, robes, and signature touches are exactly what guests want to see. Unlike listing prep where you depersonalize the space, vacation rental prep is about staging the experience. Keep these visible — they're the reason your property gets booked over the next one.

Ready when you are

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