Homeowners

How to Publish Your First Listing on HomeBodies

Create, review, and publish a strong property listing so qualified tenants can discover your home.

Updated 2026-02-21

Your listing is more than a description of your property — it’s your first impression.

A clear, thoughtful listing helps attract aligned tenants and reduces back-and-forth questions later.

This guide walks you through how to publish your first listing properly.


Why Listing Quality Matters

Tenants are looking for stability and clarity.

A strong listing:

  • Attracts more serious inquiries
  • Improves compatibility-based match scores
  • Reduces repetitive clarification questions
  • Signals that you’re organized and responsive

The more complete your listing, the better the experience on both sides.


1. Add Complete Property Details

Start with the fundamentals.

Include:

  • Accurate address or general location
  • Monthly rent
  • Deposit requirements
  • Availability date
  • Lease term (short-term or long-term)
  • Utilities included (if applicable)
  • Key amenities

Clarity prevents misunderstandings.

Be specific about what is included and what is not. For example:

  • Is parking included?
  • Are pets allowed?
  • Is the space furnished?

Incomplete listings tend to attract incomplete inquiries.


2. Write a Clear, Honest Description

Your description should answer:

  • What type of space is this?
  • Who is it best suited for?
  • What is the overall environment like?

For example:

Bright, quiet one-bedroom suite in a residential neighborhood. Ideal for a working professional or student seeking a calm living environment. Separate entrance, shared laundry, no smoking, one small pet considered.

This helps tenants self-select before reaching out.

You don’t need to oversell. Clarity builds better alignment than hype.


3. Upload Clear, Accurate Photos

Photos significantly influence engagement.

Use bright, well-lit images that accurately represent the space.

Tips:

  • Take photos during the day
  • Declutter before photographing
  • Include main living areas
  • Show kitchen and bathroom clearly
  • Include exterior or entrance if possible

Avoid heavily edited images that distort the space. Honest photos build trust.

Listings with clear photos generally receive stronger engagement.


4. Understand How Matching Works

HomeBodies uses listing and profile keywords to generate a compatibility score between homeowners and tenants.

This score is based on alignment — not filtering.

For example:

  • Pet policies
  • Smoking preferences
  • Remote work compatibility
  • Lease length intent

The match score does not hide tenants from you.
It simply provides a signal about compatibility.

The more accurately you select keywords attributes for your listing, the more meaningful those match scores become.

If you skip keywords, compatibility scoring may feel less precise.

Matching is designed to improve long-term fit — not just fill vacancies.


5. Review and Publish

Before publishing:

  • Confirm all property details are accurate
  • Check that rent and availability are correct
  • Ensure your listing status is set to visible

Once published, your listing becomes shareable.

You can:

  • Share your listing link in housing groups
  • Send it directly to potential tenants
  • Post it in community boards

Each shared link brings viewers back to HomeBodies, where they can create their own account and connect through the platform.


6. Respond Promptly to Inquiries

Timely responses improve engagement and build confidence.

Even a simple acknowledgment helps:

Thanks for reaching out — I’ll review your profile and follow up shortly.

Responsiveness signals professionalism.

Early conversations set the tone for the entire rental relationship.


Final Thought

A strong listing is clear, honest, and complete.

You don’t need to overcomplicate it.
You don’t need marketing language.

Provide accurate details.
Select thoughtful keywords.
Upload clear photos.

From there, the right tenants are more likely to find you.