How to manage multiple parking spots without losing control
Managing one parking spot informally is very different from managing two, five, or a small group of spaces. Every additional spot adds another gate, surface, access rule, calendar, vehicle limit, and driver question. The goal is not to make the host remember more; it is to make each space easy to describe and repeat.
Give every space its own operating sheet
Start with a separate record for each spot: exact approach, dimensions, height limit, surface, lighting, access method, permitted hours, and a safe place for a driver to wait. The availability calendar guide helps turn the hours into a schedule, while the occupancy and pricing guide helps you compare demand without changing every space blindly.
Use distinct photos and a clear internal name for each space. Never copy an access code, gate instruction, or vehicle restriction from one listing to another without checking it. If a driver books the wrong bay, the problem is operational—not a wording detail. Keep private codes and household information out of the public listing, and share only what the confirmed booking requires.
Standardise the repeatable parts
Create a short pre-arrival message template, a fallback if the gate does not open, and a closing checklist for damage, lights, and access. Review calendars together before accepting a request that could overlap with another driver or a personal use of the space. If one spot becomes unavailable, update only that listing and communicate a factual alternative through the supported booking process.
Before adding another space, review the public host flow and use the earnings calculator as a planning aid, not a promise. Multiple spots work when each one remains accurate, independently accessible, and easy to hand back to its owner.