New Packhood hosts default to one of two pricing mistakes: significantly underpricing "to be safe" (and leaving 15-25% of annual income on the table for the entire booking), or significantly overpricing "to test the ceiling" (and watching the listing sit empty for 6 weeks).
Both are avoidable. The actual pricing logic in 2026 Ireland is straightforward, data-driven, and only requires 5 minutes of research per listing. Here's the exact method.
Step 1 — find the city / suburb median
Open Packhood search, type your city. Filter to your space type (garage / spare room / shed). Sort by price low-to-high. Scroll to roughly the middle of the results — that's your local median.
For 2026 reference: Dublin garage median ~€140; Cork ~€105; Galway ~€100; Limerick ~€85; Waterford ~€80; Sligo / Wexford / Athlone ~€70.
Spare rooms typically list 25–35% below garage rates in the same city. Sheds (outdoor-covered) list 30–50% below garages. Attics (climate-stable indoor) list at the same rate as garages or slightly above.
Step 2 — adjust for your specific space
Start at the median and adjust ±€5 to €15 for each of these features:
+€10: 24/7 access (most listings have day/evening only).
+€10: ground floor / no steps (matters more than people think — sofas, washing machines, motorbikes).
+€5: alarmed.
+€5: own driveway / off-street parking for renter to pull up.
+€10: double-door access (suits motorcycles, large furniture).
+€5: climate-stable (well-insulated attic, dry basement) — relevant for items that hate damp.
−€10: shared driveway / hard to reach.
−€15: only one access window per day (e.g. mornings only).
−€10: no light fitting / requires renter to bring their own torch.
Add the deltas. Don't worry about overcorrecting — the result is your starting price, not your final price.
Step 3 — adjust based on response in the first 30 days
If you get a booking within 14 days at your starting price: you priced correctly or slightly under. Hold the price; consider raising €5–€10 on the next renewal in 12 months.
If 14 days passes with inquiries but no booking: drop €5. Often that's enough. Inquiries mean the photos are working but the price is the friction.
If 30 days passes with no inquiries at all: photos are the problem, not the price. Re-shoot using the 5-photo plan before discounting.
If you get inquiries that stop responding when you reply: usually a description issue (the listing implied something the chat clarified incorrectly). Re-read your description.
Why "€5 above median" beats "€15 below median"
Counter-intuitive but true: pricing significantly below the local median doesn't book your listing faster. It often books slower. Two reasons:
Reason 1 — perceived quality. Renters who see €110 on a Cork garage when neighbours are at €130 wonder what's wrong with it. Damp? Awkward access? Hostile owner? They click on the €130 instead.
Reason 2 — wrong renter type. Below-median pricing attracts price-shoppers (who churn fast). Median+ pricing attracts renters who valued the listing on quality and stay for the duration.
Hosts who price €5 above local median consistently report longer bookings, fewer support messages, and renewal rates ~15% higher than below-median hosts. The €5/mo more × 12 months = an extra €60/yr; combined with the longer tenure, it's a meaningful difference.
When to actually price below median
Three legitimate reasons to underprice. (1) Dirty / unfinished space: if the floor is rough concrete or the walls have unfinished blockwork, that's a real reason for a €15 discount until you fix it. (2) Limited access: if the only way in is a 30-minute walk from any parking, that's worth €15 less than otherwise. (3) Aggressive first-month special: some hosts offer "first month free" or "10% off the first booking" to fill an empty listing fast. Time-bounded discounts work; permanent below-median pricing leaks income forever.
Test, don't guess
List the space at median + your delta. If it doesn't book in 14 days, drop €5. If it doesn't book in 30, re-shoot photos. If it does book, leave the price alone — you nailed it on the first try.