San Francisco, California short-term rentals run an average of 66% occupancy and $158 RevPAR across the year.
San Francisco short-term rentals run 66% average occupancy across the year, producing an annual RevPAR of $158 — occupancy multiplied by average daily rate.
From June 2025 to June 2026, San Francisco's occupancy is up 14.0% and RevPAR is up 5.6%.
On AirDNA's seasonality scale, San Francisco scores 94 out of 100, where a higher score means steadier demand year-round and a lower score means sharper peak-and-trough swings.
San Francisco's Seasonality subscore is 94 out of 100, one of five inputs to its overall Market Score of 88. A higher score means steadier demand across the year.
Seasonality is the percentage gap between San Francisco's lowest and highest monthly average revenue over the past year — the smaller the swing, the higher the score.
It is benchmarked against other short-term rental markets in the same country with at least 15 active listings.
Market-level averages hide wide variation. Here's how to go deeper in the app:
Key definitions

How occupancy and RevPAR rise and fall through the year in San Francisco, month by month.
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Frequently asked
San Francisco runs 66% annual occupancy.
San Francisco's short-term rental occupancy is up 14.0% from June 2025 to June 2026, currently 66% of available nights booked.
RevPAR (revenue per available rental) is occupancy multiplied by average daily rate. It reflects what a listing earns across every available night. San Francisco's annual RevPAR is $158.
San Francisco's RevPAR is up 5.6% from June 2025 to June 2026, currently $158.
San Francisco scores 94 out of 100 on AirDNA's seasonality scale. Higher scores mean steadier demand year-round.
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