Rebekah Hanna sits on her couch in her upstairs Airbnb unit. (Haley Boyce, Ball Bearings)

Cozy as Can Airbnb

Airbnb gives travelers a variety of unique and comfy places to stay. 

The modern day traveling experience is ever changing. Travelers have swapped their paper maps for the GPS app on their phone, long car rides for short flights, and now their hotels and resorts for Airbnbs. 

Airbnb has crafted an intimate way to feel at home even when you’re in a foreign place. The company allows people from all over the world to rent out their homes in order to give travelers a more personal place to stay during their trip. 

In 2007, Airbnb was born after three travelers in San Francisco stayed in the homes of two hosts. Fourteen years later, the company has over five million listings in more than 220 countries and regions. 

When it comes to the global economy, travel and tourism make up over ten percent. These activities were put to a halt when the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic hit. But Americans are ready to get back on the road and up in the air. 

According to a 2021 Airbnb survey, 24 percent of Americans have been feeling isolated and alone. The survey also reports that although Americans miss going to restaurants and events, they miss traveling the most. 

While Americans are ready to get back into the swing of traveling, Airbnb hosts are also ready to start welcoming guests back into their homes. 

Rebekah Hanna is an Airbnb host in Muncie. She currently has two units, both in a house on Jackson Street. 

The house isn’t just your average Airbnb — it’s one of Muncie’s historic landmarks. 

The property stuck out to Hanna as soon as she saw it.

“We moved here in 2002, and I wanted to buy it at that point,” says Hanna. “It was for sale for a while, and it was in really bad shape.” 

According to Hanna, who also works as a renter, the house was slowly deteriorating. Large holes were beginning to form in the backyard, ready to consume the house. 

Hanna was finally able to rescue the house in 2018. She got to work right away, and began renovating the property that same year.

“To do any renovations on old homes, whether they’re a landmark or not, is very, very expensive,” Hanna says. 

In January of 2020, she began to turn a profit by renting out her units. Since then, she’s become a “superhost.” To qualify as a superhost, Hanna had to host at least 10 stays yearly, keep at least 90 percent response rate to messages, receive five-star reviews from at least 80 percent of her guests and cancel on guests little to none. 

Not many hosts have achieved superhost status. According to AIRDNA, an application used to track data from Airbnb, only 19.4 percent of hosts in 2017 became superhosts. That’s only 392,000 hosts out of 2.2 million possible. 

But before she began renting out her property, Hanna did her research — she read books about Airbnb and looked up listings in bigger cities like Chicago. 

“There’s not a lot of people who do this as a business,” says Hanna.

The stained glass window in the lower until glistens in the sun. (Haley Boyce, Ball Bearings)

With her Airbnb units, her goal is to have her house feel like real estate. The unit has a modern feel to it, with splashes of its history. She decorates it with leather couches, black and white patterned rugs and pillows. But there’s also the stained glass window in one of the rooms and the staircase draped in a red carpet. 

Hanna is satisfied with the way her Airbnbs have been doing, even during a pandemic. She says there were only two months where she didn’t have any guests. 

Rebekah Hannah’s Airbnb units sit in this house on W. Jackson Street in Muncie. (Shannon McCloskey, Ball Bearings)

As the pandemic continued, Hanna eventually had a traveling nurse stay at her Airbnb which helped keep her units afloat. The nurse stayed with her about 10 times. 

“That helped me stay positive,” says Hanna. “I think people are honestly more comfortable staying in an Airbnb setting.” 

A light shines on a bedroom in one of Hanna’s units. (Haley Boyce, Ball Bearings)

Staying in Airbnbs for remote work was a common trend in 2020. One in five Airbnb guests were staying in an Airbnb for remote work or travel. 

Some of Hanna’s guests during the pandemic were also having small events that required them to stay in her unit. 

“People were doing small things like small weddings. The groom-to-be stayed here, and they did some photos here,” says Hanna.

Carpet drapes the stairs leading toward one of Hanna’s units. (Haley Boyce, Ball Bearings)

So what makes Airbnb unique? For one, the options for where guests can stay can make for an unforgettable trip.

Airbnb allows their customers to search for “unique homes,” such as yurts, islands, huts, earth houses, barns, farm stays, houseboats, treehouses, cabins, domes, apartments, and tiny homes.

 During one trip to Kentucky, Hanna and her family stayed in a treehouse. She’s also had the opportunity to stay in a historic neighborhood in Fort Wayne thanks to a rental on Airbnb. 

Whether you’re in a historical home like Hanna’s unit in Muncie or a glamping dome in Gann, Ohio (yes, you read that right), the options are endless for your Airbnb stay.


Sources: Airbnb News, Airbnb News, Airbnb News, AIRDNA, AIRDNA, Airbnb News, Airbnb

Images: Haley Boyce

Featured Image: Haley Boyce