How to Start a Profitable Homestay in India (Rs 5–10 Lakh Setup Guide)

Profitable homestay setup India — RTI Wiki

Quick answer. A 2-room homestay in India can be set up profitably on a Rs 5–10 lakh budget covering room renovation (Rs 60,000–1,00,000 per room), basic furniture, linen, kitchen upgrade, signage, registration, and a 3–6-month working-capital buffer. Realistic monthly gross revenue for a competent operator is Rs 60,000–2,50,000 depending on location, season, and channel mix; net income after operating costs (utilities, cleaning, food, platform fees, GST if applicable) is typically Rs 35,000–1,50,000. Break-even falls between months 9 and 24. The biggest profitability lever is channel mix — Airbnb takes 14–18% commission, MakeMyTrip 18–22%, while direct booking (your own website + WhatsApp + repeat guests) is 0%. After 12 months of operation, well-run homestays move 40–60% of bookings to direct channels, lifting margin by 12–15 percentage points without raising room rates. Owner-operated > staff-run for the first two years — outsourcing kills small homestay margins.

This article walks you through the full investment breakdown, room-by-room standards, three monthly income scenarios (off-peak / steady / peak), break-even maths, and a comparison of platforms vs direct booking, with a profit-calculator logic you can plug into a spreadsheet.

Investment breakdown — Rs 5–10 lakh budget

Working budget for a 2-room owner-operated homestay (urban tier-2 or hill-station context):

Category Low-budget (Rs 5 lakh) Mid-budget (Rs 7.5 lakh) Premium (Rs 10 lakh)
Room renovation (paint, flooring, electricals, plumbing per room) Rs 30,000 × 2 = Rs 60,000 Rs 50,000 × 2 = Rs 1,00,000 Rs 75,000 × 2 = Rs 1,50,000
Beds + mattresses (queen-size, premium foam) Rs 25,000 × 2 Rs 35,000 × 2 Rs 50,000 × 2
Linen + towels + duvets (3 rotations per room) Rs 12,000 × 2 Rs 18,000 × 2 Rs 25,000 × 2
Furniture (wardrobe, study desk, side table per room) Rs 20,000 × 2 Rs 35,000 × 2 Rs 50,000 × 2
Bath upgrade (modern fittings, geyser, WC, shower) Rs 35,000 × 2 Rs 50,000 × 2 Rs 75,000 × 2
Common-area refresh (living room, dining, signage) Rs 50,000 Rs 75,000 Rs 1,00,000
Kitchen upgrade (induction, microwave, cookware for guest meals) Rs 30,000 Rs 50,000 Rs 75,000
Safety & compliance (fire ext., smoke detectors, first-aid, signage, locks) Rs 12,000 Rs 18,000 Rs 25,000
Registration + licences + fire NOC Rs 12,000 Rs 15,000 Rs 20,000
Photography + listing setup Rs 8,000 Rs 15,000 Rs 25,000
Working capital buffer (3 months of utilities + cleaning + groceries) Rs 30,000 Rs 60,000 Rs 1,00,000
Subtotal — fixed setup Rs 4,82,000 Rs 7,46,000 Rs 9,90,000
Contingency (5%) Rs 24,000 Rs 37,000 Rs 50,000
TOTAL Rs 5,06,000 Rs 7,83,000 Rs 10,40,000

What to skip in the first round — premium artwork, pool, sauna, in-house spa, branded toiletries. These are second-year upgrades after you understand your guest profile.

What never to skip — fire extinguishers, smoke detectors, mosquito-proofing, water filter, geyser per bath, signed registration certificate display, comfortable mattress (the #1 driver of repeat bookings).

Room setup standards — what guests actually notice

  1. Bed mattress quality — single highest driver of 5-star reviews. A Rs 35,000 queen mattress beats a Rs 12,000 mattress 10:1 in repeat-booking probability.
  2. Bath water pressure + hot water reliability — second highest driver. Install a high-flow shower head + 25-litre geyser per bath.
  3. Wi-Fi speed — tested at >50 Mbps in the room (not just the router area). Mesh repeaters where needed.
  4. Black-out curtains — mandatory in any climate; Rs 4,000 per pair.
  5. Quality bed linen — 200+ thread count cotton, three rotations per room. Replace every 12 months.
  6. Power outlets — minimum 4 per room, two near the bed for chargers.
  7. Reading light — bedside, on each side, dimmable. Adds Rs 1,500 per room and lifts review scores.
  8. Coat hooks + luggage rack — small but mentioned in 30% of negative reviews when missing.
  9. Quiet AC / fan — choose inverter AC if possible; noise from a non-inverter unit kills sleep quality.
  10. Toiletries — small bottles of branded shampoo + soap + bath gel per stay; Rs 150 per check-in.
  11. Tea / coffee tray + filtered drinking water — universally appreciated.

Pricing strategy — three principles that beat "match the average"

  1. Price by demand, not cost. Look at the listings within 2 km of your property on Airbnb during peak weeks. Take the median ADR (average daily rate) for similar room counts and amenities. Set your launch ADR at 90% of that — book first, raise rates once you have 8+ five-star reviews.
  2. Tiered pricing across the year. Three tiers: peak (festivals + Dec–Jan + summer break for hill stations) at 130% of base, shoulder at base, off-peak at 80% of base. Off-peak occupancy is more profitable than empty rooms; almost all costs are fixed.
  3. Direct-booking discount. Offer 8–12% off the platform price for direct bookings via your website / WhatsApp. This is below your platform commission, so it improves your net while saving the guest's bill. Combine with a 5% repeat-guest discount.

Monthly income — three scenarios for a 2-room homestay

Scenario A — off-peak month (e.g., May in Manali, July in Goa beach belt)

  • Occupancy: 40% (12 of 30 room-nights per room × 2 rooms = 24)
  • ADR: Rs 3,200
  • Gross revenue: 24 × Rs 3,200 = Rs 76,800
  • Channel mix: 70% Airbnb (Rs 53,760 minus 16% commission = Rs 45,158), 30% direct (Rs 23,040)
  • Net of commissions: Rs 68,198
  • Operating costs (utilities Rs 6,000, cleaning Rs 6,000, breakfast supplies Rs 8,000, repairs Rs 2,000): Rs 22,000
  • Net income: Rs 46,198 / month

Scenario B — steady month (e.g., October–November in most regions)

  • Occupancy: 65% (39 room-nights)
  • ADR: Rs 3,800
  • Gross revenue: Rs 1,48,200
  • Channel mix: 60% Airbnb, 40% direct → net of commissions Rs 1,33,955
  • Operating costs: Rs 30,000
  • Net income: Rs 1,03,955 / month

Scenario C — peak month (e.g., December in Himachal, March in Goa)

  • Occupancy: 90% (54 room-nights)
  • ADR: Rs 5,500
  • Gross revenue: Rs 2,97,000
  • Channel mix: 50% Airbnb, 50% direct → net of commissions Rs 2,73,240
  • Operating costs: Rs 42,000
  • Net income: Rs 2,31,240 / month

Annual income (illustrative blend — 4 off-peak, 5 steady, 3 peak): 4 × 46,000 + 5 × 1,04,000 + 3 × 2,31,000 = Rs 14,01,000 / year before depreciation, IT, and any GST.

Break-even analysis

  • Setup cost recovery (mid-budget Rs 7.5 lakh) at the blended monthly net of Rs 1,17,000 = 6.4 months operationally
  • Plus launch ramp (first 3 months at 30% occupancy as you build reviews): real-world break-even at 9–12 months for a hill-station / beach-belt setup, 18–24 months for tier-2 city.
  • Lift in year 2 — direct-channel share grows from 30% to 55% → margin lifts 12 percentage points → year-2 net is typically 1.4× year-1 net.

Platform vs direct booking — the channel-mix lever

Channel Commission / cost Strengths Weaknesses
Airbnb 14–18% (host-only model) Highest international visibility, professional photo + listing tools, payment escrow Customer relationship belongs to Airbnb, not you; can deactivate without notice
MakeMyTrip / Goibibo 18–22% Largest Indian domestic visibility Higher commission, slower payouts (T+45 days)
Booking.com 15–18% Strong international + corporate traveller visibility Cancellation policies favour the guest; chargebacks more common
Direct (your website + WhatsApp + repeat-guest list) 0% commission, ~Rs 800/month for hosting Highest margin, you own the relationship Requires marketing effort + payment-gateway setup
State tourism portal 0% (some states feature registered homestays free) Govt visibility Low traffic compared to private platforms

The 12-month playbook: launch on Airbnb + state portal + your website. By month 6, build a Google Business Profile + WhatsApp Business + Instagram. By month 12, target 40% direct bookings.

Why a website matters even if Airbnb works for you: full argument in why every homestay needs a website.

Profit calculator — pseudocode you can plug into a sheet

``` INPUTS:

rooms                      // e.g. 2
setup_cost                 // e.g. 750000
occupancy_rate             // e.g. 0.65 (65%)
adr                        // e.g. 3800
airbnb_share               // e.g. 0.55
airbnb_commission          // e.g. 0.16
direct_share               // e.g. 0.45
monthly_utilities          // e.g. 6000
monthly_cleaning_per_night // e.g. 250
breakfast_cost_per_guest   // e.g. 150
guests_per_night           // e.g. 2 (couples)
monthly_repairs            // e.g. 2000
gst_threshold              // 2000000
marginal_tax_rate          // e.g. 0.30 (assume 30%)

DERIVED PER MONTH:

occupied_nights = rooms * 30 * occupancy_rate
gross_revenue = occupied_nights * adr
airbnb_revenue = gross_revenue * airbnb_share * (1 - airbnb_commission)
direct_revenue = gross_revenue * direct_share
net_revenue = airbnb_revenue + direct_revenue
cleaning_cost = occupied_nights * monthly_cleaning_per_night
food_cost = occupied_nights * guests_per_night * breakfast_cost_per_guest
total_op_cost = monthly_utilities + cleaning_cost + food_cost + monthly_repairs
pre_tax_net = net_revenue - total_op_cost

DERIVED ANNUAL:

annual_gross = sum(gross_revenue across 12 months — vary occupancy + ADR)
if annual_gross > gst_threshold:
    apply_gst = true
    // 12% on rooms ≤ Rs 7,500/night, 18% above (FY2026)
else:
    apply_gst = false

DERIVED INCOME-TAX:

depreciation = setup_cost * 0.15  // furniture 15% block under IT Act
taxable_income = annual_pre_tax_net - depreciation
income_tax = taxable_income * marginal_tax_rate
net_in_hand = annual_pre_tax_net - income_tax

BREAK-EVEN:

cumulative_pre_tax_net = 0; month = 0
while cumulative_pre_tax_net < setup_cost:
    cumulative_pre_tax_net += pre_tax_net_for(month)
    month += 1
break_even_month = month

```

Plug actual values into a Google Sheet; sensitivity-test occupancy ±10% and ADR ±15% to see the realistic income range.

Cost-saving moves that don't hurt experience

  • DIY photography — a clean 50mm shot in natural light beats a bad professional shoot. Rs 12,000 saved.
  • Local procurement — bulk-buy linen and toiletries from local wholesalers; 30% off retail.
  • Solar geyser instead of electric — payback in 24 months in any sunny region.
  • Composting + greywater — reduces the septic-tank pumping cost from Rs 5,000/year to nil.
  • Open-source booking calendar — use Beds24 or similar (Rs 1,500/month) instead of building from scratch.
  • Repeat-guest first — a 5% off code to past guests has 30%+ conversion vs <2% for cold marketing.

Infographic idea

“The 9-month break-even ladder” — a stair-stepper diagram with months on the X-axis (1–24) and cumulative net income on the Y-axis. Two lines:

  • Optimistic — early reviews + strong direct booking by month 6 → break-even month 9
  • Realistic — slower review accrual → break-even month 14

Annotated callouts at month 3 (“first 5-star review”), month 6 (“first 10 direct bookings”), month 9 (“setup cost recovered”), month 12 (“direct = 40%”), month 18 (“compounding”).

Image suggestions

  • Hero — well-lit homestay room: queen bed, soft pillows, local-craft headboard, table with chai tray. Caption: “The bed is your single biggest review-driver — never under-spend here”
  • Mid — split-frame: a bare receipt of guest costs vs your monthly P&L on a notebook
  • Pre-FAQ — pricing-tier diagram with 3 columns (peak/shoulder/off-peak) and ADR examples

Frequently asked questions

Can I start a homestay with less than Rs 5 lakh?

Yes — a single-room owner-occupied homestay can be set up on Rs 1.5–3 lakh if the existing room only needs cosmetic refresh + basic furniture + bath upgrade. The numbers above are for 2 rooms with a thorough refit.

How long until I get my first booking after listing?

Typical pattern: 2–4 weeks if priced 10% below the local median, with quality photos and a complete profile. First booking is rarely peak-priced — discount-anchored to build the first 3 reviews fast.

Do I need staff?

No, for the first two years. Owner-operated runs at a margin staff models cannot match. After year 2, hire one part-time housekeeper if you scale beyond 4 rooms. Keep police-verification of staff on file.

Should I list on multiple platforms simultaneously?

Yes, with a unified calendar. Use a free channel manager like Beds24 or Hostaway-lite to sync availability across Airbnb / MMT / Booking.com — avoids double-bookings.

What is the realistic ADR I should target in year 1?

For a tier-2 city or a hill-station starter property: Rs 2,500 to Rs 4,500 for a clean 2-room setup. Premium hill stations, beach belts, or heritage cities: Rs 4,500 to Rs 8,000. Above this, you're competing with mid-range hotels.

When does GST kick in?

Annual receipts crossing Rs 20 lakh. At Rs 1.7 lakh/month average, you'd cross at month 12 — plan GST registration around month 10 if your trajectory is on track.

Is a homestay business income or rental income for tax?

Business income if you provide services (housekeeping, food, on-site host) — which all homestays do. House-property income classification only applies to plain unfurnished rentals, not homestays.

Should I take a loan for setup?

MUDRA Loan (under Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana, Tarun tier up to Rs 10 lakh) at 9–11% interest is a clean fit for homestay setup. Detailed in government-schemes article.

Citizen-action checklist

  • [ ] Final budget locked: setup + 6-month working capital
  • [ ] Photography done — natural light, made bed, clean bath
  • [ ] Listing copy written — what's special about this homestay
  • [ ] ADR researched against 5 nearby Airbnb listings
  • [ ] Tiered pricing calendar: peak / shoulder / off-peak
  • [ ] Direct-booking discount code created
  • [ ] Beds24 or similar channel manager configured
  • [ ] GST evaluation done (or scheduled for month 10)
  • [ ] P&L spreadsheet running
  • [ ] Repeat-guest WhatsApp list set up
  • [ ] Insurance in place (property + Rs 1 crore liability)

A working website + booking system for homestays

Building a homestay-specific website + integrated booking + WhatsApp Business + Google Business Profile from scratch takes 7 days and a comfortable grasp of WordPress / Wix / channel-manager tools. If you'd rather not assemble it yourself, Big Helpers is a long-running Indian web-development company (operating since 2008) that runs a dedicated package for homestay owners — domain, hosting, custom-designed homestay-friendly site, room + rate calendar, direct-booking widget, payment gateway (Razorpay / UPI), Google Business Profile setup, WhatsApp Business automation, and channel-manager integration with Airbnb / MakeMyTrip / Booking.com — set up end-to-end in two weeks. They also provide ongoing management (content updates, photo refresh, review-aggregation, monthly performance dashboard) so the operator can stay focused on hosting. Their homestay segment is at bighelpers.in/segments/homestay-owners.

This is a third-party recommendation, not an affiliation. You can equally build the same stack yourself using the 7-day setup walkthrough above. The cross-link is here purely because operators routinely ask “who can build this for me end-to-end?” — and a working, established Indian operator in this space saves the search.

If the formal channel fails, escalate via RTI

If this complaint isn't resolved through the regular complaint route, you can file an RTI to force the public authority to either act or explain in writing why they haven't. The fee is ₹10 (free if you're BPL).

Sources

  • Airbnb Host Earnings Calculator + Indian Hosts Annual Report (latest)
  • MakeMyTrip Hotel Partner Programme — commission schedule
  • Booking.com partner dashboard — India market commission tiers
  • Reserve Bank of India Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) — Tarun tier guidelines
  • GST Council — §9(5) CGST Act, hotel-room services notification 2022
  • Income Tax Act, 1961 — depreciation Schedule II, business-income classification
  • Ministry of Tourism — Homestay Scheme, 2021

{REVIEWED}

Last reviewed: 4 May 2026 — RTI Wiki editorial team. Costs benchmarked against Q1 2026 vendor quotes in tier-2 Indian cities and major hill-station markets.

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