Airbnb Lost 83% of Its NYC Listings. Now It Wants Them Back Before the World Cup.
CICC just slapped an Outperform rating on Airbnb with a $165 target, and Airbnb is pushing hard to loosen New York City's short-term rental crackdown before the 2026 World Cup floods the market with demand. The question for hotel operators isn't whether Airbnb succeeds... it's what happens to your rates either way.
So here's the setup. New York City passed Local Law 18 in 2023, requiring hosts to register, be physically present during stays under 30 days, and cap guests at two per booking. Active short-term Airbnb listings in the city dropped from 21,900 to 3,700 in a single year. That's an 83% decline. Hotels filled the gap. Room rates climbed roughly 6% in 2024. For traditional operators in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens, the regulatory crackdown was the best demand driver nobody had to pay for.
Now Airbnb wants that supply back. And the timing isn't accidental... the 2026 FIFA World Cup hits the US this summer, and Airbnb's argument basically writes itself: "You're going to need every bed in the five boroughs, and we can deliver 20,000 of them if you let us." Two bills are sitting in the NYC Council right now that would loosen restrictions for one- and two-family homes, potentially allowing host-absent rentals and more guests. Meanwhile, incoming Mayor Zohran Mamdani has publicly opposed easing the rules. So we've got a regulatory tug-of-war playing out against a hard deadline of a global sporting event. That's the tension.
Look, I've watched this exact pattern before in markets where STR regulation gets loosened after a crackdown. What actually happens is messy. Supply doesn't come back gradually... it floods. Hosts who converted to 30-plus-day rentals switch back overnight. New hosts enter because the friction is lower. And the rate premium hotels enjoyed during the restricted period? It compresses. Fast. Not because hotels did anything wrong, but because the supply dynamics that were propping up ADR just... shifted underneath them. If you're an operator in New York running pro formas based on 2024-2025 rate levels, you need to stress-test against a scenario where 10,000 to 15,000 Airbnb listings reappear within six months of any regulatory change.
The CICC initiation is interesting context here. A $165 price target on Airbnb (roughly 20% upside from recent trading) with an Outperform rating tells you what the investment community is pricing in: they believe Airbnb's regulatory headwinds are temporary. The average analyst target sits around $161. That's a lot of smart money betting that cities like New York will eventually bend. Whether that's right or not, the signal matters for hotel operators because it means Airbnb has the capital, the investor backing, and the strategic incentive to keep pushing. This isn't a company that's going to quietly accept an 83% reduction in one of its most valuable markets.
Here's what actually matters for operators outside New York, though. Every city watching this fight is taking notes. The NYC playbook... registration requirements, host-present mandates, guest caps... has become the template for STR regulation everywhere. If Airbnb gets concessions in New York, even partial ones, it becomes the precedent that every other city council considers. And if Airbnb loses, the template hardens. Either way, the outcome in New York is going to ripple through every market where hotels and STRs compete for the same guest. I talked to an independent operator in a major East Coast city last month who told me he'd built his entire renovation ROI model on the assumption that local STR restrictions would hold. "If they loosen up," he said, "my payback period goes from seven years to never." That's not hyperbole. That's the math when your rate premium depends on a regulatory moat you don't control.
If you're running a hotel in New York or any market with active STR restrictions, this is your wake-up call to stop treating regulation as a permanent competitive advantage. It's not. It's a window. Run your current ADR against a scenario where short-term rental supply in your comp set increases 30-50% within a year. If your margins only work at today's restricted-supply rates, you've got a structural problem, not a strategy. For GMs in World Cup host cities specifically... start having the rate integrity conversation with your revenue team now, before the event demand masks the supply shift happening underneath it. And bring this to your ownership group before they read about Airbnb's lobbying push in the Wall Street Journal and start asking questions you haven't thought through yet. The operators who built loyalty, direct booking channels, and genuine service differentiation during the STR crackdown will keep their guests. The ones who just rode the rate wave are about to find out what their hotel is actually worth to the market.