Parking host listing refresh cycle: keep a Prague offer accurate
A parking listing can become inaccurate without the host noticing. A new gate, repainted bay, changed building rule, seasonal surface, or different weekday schedule can turn yesterday’s useful instructions into today’s friction. A refresh cycle protects visibility because searchers can trust what they read.
Review the physical route
After any change, take the route from the public street to the bay and record the entrance, gate, ramp, turn, surface, lighting, and walking exit. Check the complete vehicle fit again, including height and reversing. Replace photos that hide the new condition and remove any instruction that exposes private access details. The listing refresh guide and vehicle-fit guide provide the baseline.
Review the promise
Compare the published hours with the times the space is genuinely available. Check the minimum stay, end time, late-arrival rule, price context, and whether a host or co-host can answer a gate question. If the space is only suitable for a certain vehicle, make that visible near the start of the description. A driver should not discover a decisive restriction after payment.
Keep a short change log: date, what changed, photo updated, calendar checked, and any driver question that led to the edit. Use reviews and feedback as evidence about recurring confusion, not as a reason to hide a limitation.
Refresh when the substance changes, not merely to create a newer date. Open the host flow after the listing reflects the route a real driver will use.