For years, the short-term rental industry has been taught to chase growth through more visibility, more channels, and more bookings. But operators are pushing back harder now because the economics are getting harder to ignore.
OTA commission structures often land in the 10% to 30% range. For context, Lake.com currently sits at 10% while Booking.com alone commonly cited up to 25% depending on the property and market. Over time, that kind of cost does not just nibble at the edges. It changes how growth feels. It is one reason so many operators are stuck dealing with the same four pressures: rising commissions, a harder path to stronger direct booking performance, limited ownership of the guest relationship, and platform structures that make growth feel more rented than owned. These are not separate frustrations. They are connected pressures that shape the economics of almost every portfolio in the industry, and they are exactly why Lake.com is introducing a different model.
For too long, hospitality has treated these tradeoffs like the cost of doing business. If you wanted reach, you gave up margin. If you wanted bookings, you gave up control. If you wanted platform demand, you accepted that too much of the guest relationship would sit with the platform instead of with you.
But that logic is wearing thin.
Because let’s be honest, the last thing anyone is asking for is another OTA with a slightly different logo or a prettier interface. Operators are looking for a better structure. One that gives them a clearer way to forecast platform cost, reduce dependence on commission-heavy growth, strengthen their own guest relationships, and build a business with more control over time.
That is why the subscription OTA model matters, and why Lake.com stands out as an industry innovator. It is not trying to compete by repainting the old OTA model. It is building a different economic structure for hosts and property managers, one aimed at solving the very pressures the industry has been pushing back on.
To focus in on why this matters, especially now, it helps to look at what the traditional OTA model actually produced.
It created scale, yes. It made short-term rentals easier to discover, easier to compare, and easier to book. It helped centralize demand and gave operators access to audiences they could not have built on their own nearly as quickly.
That part is very real.
But the same model that created scale also created unbalanced dependency.
Direct bookings may be gaining traction, and that’s a fact. Lodgify’s 2024 Vacation Rental Industry Report, based on more than 1 million U.S. bookings, found that direct booking sites accounted for nearly 34% of bookings, second only to Airbnb at 46%. A quarter of hosts and property managers also said launching a direct booking site was a primary contributor to their business growth in 2024.
That is real progress. But it is only part of the story.
Skift Research estimated that Airbnb, Booking.com, and Expedia/Vrbo still controlled 71% of global short-term rental market share in 2024, up from 53% in 2019. So while the industry has absolutely moved toward more direct capability, it has not meaningfully escaped the old power structure. Operators may be learning how to generate more activity, but many still do not have enough control over the economics behind that activity.
That is the real issue.
What makes this model especially interesting is that it is not trying to solve one isolated annoyance. It is responding to four of the industry’s most persistent pressures at the same time. Because rising commissions, weak direct booking capability, limited ownership of the guest relationship, and platform-controlled growth mechanics are not random pain points.
Together, they shape the day-to-day economic pillars of a hospitality business.
Pressure No. 1: Rising Commissions Reshape Portfolio Economics
Commission pressure rarely arrives as one dramatic event. It works more like a slow leak. A little more margin disappears here. A little less breathing room shows up there. Over time, operators find themselves working harder to maintain the same financial position inside a model that keeps taking value out of every reservation. Lake.com’s subscription approach is designed to offer an alternative. Instead of treating commission loss as unavoidable, hosts can choose a membership structure that gives them a predictable annual platform cost and 0% commission within that membership model.
But wanting direct bookings and consistently earning them are two very different things.
Direct booking success does not come from launching a website and hoping for the best. It takes trust, visibility, conversion infrastructure, strong property positioning, and enough consumer confidence for a guest to choose a more direct path. That takes time, money, and expertise. And most hosts are trying to build all of that while also running the actual business.
Which is quite a daunting task.
Lake.com is not claiming to replace all of that work.
But it is creating something meaningful: an option for guests to book more directly with hosts through the host’s presence on Lake.com. This is not a promise that every guest will choose that route. It is not a guarantee of direct-booking volume. It is access to an alternative growth pathway that no other OTA offers. With it, the ability to unlock a more direct booking path that many operators have historically struggled to create alone.
Without enough ownership of the relationship, growth stays reactive.
The operator who owns more of the relationship owns more of the future value attached to that relationship.
Lake.com’s model is built around giving hosts more control, not less. That is part of what makes the subscription structure feel different. It is aligned with the idea that the host should be building an asset, not just renting access to demand.
These four issues are often discussed like separate annoyances. They are not.
They all point back to the same underlying problem: operators do not control enough of the guest or the business.
When the relationship mostly lives with the platform, the consequences show up everywhere. It gets more expensive to acquire the booking. It gets harder to bring the guest back next time.
Access to insight gets weaker. Margins get tighter. Cash flow gets slower.
That is why this is not just a marketing problem.
And it is not just a distribution problem either.
It is a business model problem.
Because once too much of the relationship sits somewhere else, when the distribution balance is off, operators don’t just give up visibility. They are giving up leverage. And over time, that shapes how confidently they can grow, how efficiently they can scale, and how much of the value they actually get to keep.
Lake’s Premium and Portfolio Subscription models are not built for everyone, and that is intentional.
It is built for innovators and early adopters. The hosts who do not just follow where the market goes, but help shape where it is headed. That includes three groups in particular.
Their relationship with the platform is direct, not buried in a queue.