Essential Amenities for Hosting Large Groups at Your Vacation Rental
The amenities that earn five-star reviews from couples will not necessarily impress a group of 12. Large groups have fundamentally different needs: more of everything, spaces designed for gathering, and the practical infrastructure to support a dozen people living under one roof for several days. Getting your amenities right is what turns a good large-group property into one that commands premium rates and repeat bookings.
The kitchen is the single most important amenity for large groups, and it is where most hosts fall short. A kitchen that works fine for 4 guests breaks down completely when 12 people are trying to cook Thanksgiving dinner. At minimum, you need a full-size refrigerator (ideally with a separate freezer section), a dishwasher, an oven, at least 4 stovetop burners, and enough counter space for multiple people to work at the same time. Stock your kitchen with at least 150% of your maximum guest count in plates, glasses, mugs, and utensils to account for items in the dishwasher.
Cookware matters more than hosts typically realize. Groups need large pots, sheet pans, a roasting pan, and serving dishes that can handle family-size portions. A standard 8-inch skillet does not help when you are cooking scrambled eggs for 10. Invest in at least two large skillets, a stockpot, and enough baking sheets to fill the oven. A coffee maker that brews more than 4 cups at a time is essential; consider a 12-cup drip machine plus a kettle for tea drinkers.
Bathrooms are the second critical infrastructure point. The general rule is one full bathroom for every 4 guests, but more is always better. If your property has fewer bathrooms than this ratio suggests, there are workarounds: an outdoor shower near the pool, a half-bath on the main floor, or staggered morning routines encouraged by placing a coffee station in the kitchen early. Make sure every bathroom is stocked with enough towels for all guests plus a few extras, and include a clearly labeled spot where guests can find replacement toilet paper, soap, and shampoo.
Hot water capacity is something groups complain about more than almost anything else. There is nothing worse than the last four people in a house of 12 getting cold showers. If your property has a traditional tank water heater, know its capacity and recovery rate. A 50-gallon tank can handle about 3 to 4 consecutive showers before running cold. Consider upgrading to a tankless water heater, which provides unlimited hot water on demand, or installing a second tank. Mention your hot water setup in your listing if it is a strength.
Outdoor amenities attract group bookings more than anything else in the listing photos. A large deck or patio with seating for the full group is table stakes. Beyond that, the amenities that generate the most booking conversions for groups are, in rough order of impact: a private pool or hot tub, an outdoor dining table with seating for 10 or more, a gas or charcoal grill, a fire pit with surrounding seating, and a yard large enough for lawn games. You do not need all of these, but you need at least two or three.
Indoor entertainment keeps groups together during downtime and bad weather. A game room with a pool table, foosball table, or ping pong table is a major draw. At minimum, provide a selection of board games, card games, and puzzles suitable for different ages. A TV with streaming services in the main living area is expected, but consider adding a second TV in a separate room so different parts of the group can watch different things. A Bluetooth speaker for music is a small investment that groups consistently mention in positive reviews.
Parking is a practical amenity that hosts often overlook. A group of 12 guests might arrive in 3 to 5 separate cars. If your property has a driveway that fits 2 cars and street parking is limited, that is a problem you need to address in your listing. Be honest about how many cars can park on-site and provide clear instructions about overflow parking options. If nearby street parking is free and plentiful, say so. If guests need a permit, include the details in your automated pre-arrival message through Hostaway.
Finally, do not forget the basics at scale. Provide at least 2 sets of bed linens per bed so your cleaning team can strip and remake quickly. Stock enough hangers in closets for all guests. Include a washer and dryer, which is nearly mandatory for group stays longer than 3 nights. Provide a first aid kit, a fire extinguisher, flashlights, and printed emergency information. A binder or digital guidebook with appliance instructions, Wi-Fi password, trash and recycling schedule, and local emergency numbers saves you from answering the same questions for every booking. These operational details add up to the kind of polished experience that earns 5-star reviews and repeat group bookings.
