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Parking host visibility checklist: make a Prague listing easier to choose

July 12, 2026 · Guides for hosts

Visibility starts before a driver compares prices. A parking listing has to answer a small set of practical questions quickly: where is the entrance, when can the driver arrive, will the vehicle fit, and what happens after booking? If those answers are missing, a host can have a useful space and still lose the search.

Check the listing like a first-time driver

Use a clear title that names the area and the useful feature without promising a venue relationship. Add a street-context photo, entrance photo, gate or ramp photo, and a photo of the bay. The parking spot photo guide explains how to show the route without publishing private codes or household details.

Write down approximate width, length, height clearance, surface, lighting, turning space, and the walking route to the likely destination. Say when a van, roof box, or large SUV may not fit. A precise limitation improves trust more than a vague claim that the spot is “easy.”

Make the next action obvious

Open only the hours you can keep, set a price that matches access and effort, and send the driver to the booking flow once the listing is ready. The listing-writing guide and availability calendar guide cover the foundations. After publishing, check the listing on a phone and ask someone unfamiliar with the entrance to explain how they would arrive.

Visibility is not a promise of bookings. It is the removal of uncertainty that prevents a good driver-host match. The host-operations guides cover the wider listing, permission, availability, and response workflow. Start the host flow only after confirming that you own or are allowed to offer the space.

Your empty spot is money

List a driveway, garage, or reserved spot on Figpark and earn from the hours it sits empty. Drivers book and pay online — the app keeps the reservation details together.

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