Curious about the performance of short-term rentals in Lyon, France? Over the last year, the average occupancy rate was 63% with an ADR (Average Daily Rate) of 93€. Hosts earned on average 1645€ per month.

90-day occupancy forecast for Lyon so you can update rates and stay ahead of competitors.
Key metrics to optimize your pricing strategy
Avg. Monthly Revenue
1645€
$1497 USD
YoY Revenue Change
-8%
vs. previous year
Occupancy Rate
63%
~19 days/month
Average Daily Rate
93€
$85 USD
Seasonality Index
41%
demand variation
Best Months
October, September
peak season
Worst Months
February, January
low season
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Over the June 2025 to May 2026 analysis period, Lyon ran 64% average occupancy, about three points above the national average of roughly 61% and equal to around 229 booked nights a year, so on fill it is a dependable mid-table performer. The story is in the rate: at an ADR of 93 EUR, Lyon sits near the bottom of the French cities we track, far below the national average of about 148 EUR, which is why average monthly revenue lands at only 1,645 EUR despite the healthy occupancy.
The seasonality index of 41 is the flattest in our French set, confirming Lyon as a steady, all-year city rather than a peak-driven market. The figure to watch is year-on-year revenue at -8%, a clear decline against a broadly flat national picture. That softening lines up with rising legal supply pressure and Lyon's tightening short-term-rental rules; managers should plan for compressed rates and lean on occupancy and events rather than expecting nightly prices to recover quickly.
📌 Historical trends reveal seasonal highs – plan accordingly.
These figures reflect real-time demand in Lyon, helping you plan and price strategically.
Lyon is France's second economic hub and a year-round city-break and business destination, and that mix is what drives its Airbnb demand. Roughly 60% of overnight stays here are tied to business: the Part-Dieu office district, a heavy banking, pharmaceutical and biotech base, and a busy convention calendar fill apartments midweek, while the UNESCO-listed old town, the gastronomy scene and Lyon's status as the birthplace of cinema pull leisure visitors at weekends. With close to 200,000 students, there is also steady visiting-family and academic traffic.
For rental managers this means demand leans on corporate travel and culture rather than holiday weather, which keeps occupancy solid but caps nightly rates well below France's coastal and Alpine markets. Guests here are typically short-stay, central-location seekers who care about metro access and walkability to Vieux Lyon and the Presqu'ile more than about space or views. It is a volume market: reliable bookings at modest ADR, best run with tight pricing and fast turnovers.
Lyon's demand is unusually flat for a French city, with a seasonality index of just 41, the lowest among the major French markets we track. The strongest months are October and September, when the autumn trade-fair and congress season at Eurexpo and Part-Dieu is in full swing and the weather is still mild; the genuine low is February and January, cold and post-holiday, when managers should discount hardest.
Two events reliably move demand. The Fete des Lumieres (5-8 December 2026), Lyon's signature Festival of Lights, draws huge crowds for four nights and is the one clear winter spike worth a premium. In summer, Nuits de Fourviere (28 May to 25 July 2026), the open-air concert and performance festival in the Roman theatre, supports an otherwise quieter stretch. Because the curve is so shallow, the right play in Lyon is consistent occupancy and event-led pricing bumps rather than a single high season.
The Presqu'ile, the central peninsula between the Rhone and Saone around Place Bellecour, is the prime short-term-rental zone: walkable, full of restaurants and shops, and equidistant from everything, so it commands the steadiest demand and the best rates. Vieux Lyon (Old Lyon) at the foot of Fourviere is the postcard quarter, Renaissance streets and traboules that sell well to first-time leisure visitors but turn over with weekend rhythm.
Part-Dieu on the east bank is the business play: plainer, but next to the main TGV station and the towers, it captures reliable midweek corporate bookings. Croix-Rousse, the former silk-weavers' hill, draws design-led, longer-stay guests at gentler prices, while the redeveloped Confluence in the south is modern and growing but more dependent on events at its museum and venues. For most managers, Presqu'ile maximises rate and Part-Dieu maximises weekday fill.
Lyon has some of France's tighter short-term-rental rules and they hardened in 2026. Following a deliberation voted on 25 June 2025, the city applies a 90-night annual cap on letting an entire primary residence from 1 January 2026, down from the previous 120. Every furnished tourist rental must be registered with the town hall, and under the November 2024 Le Meur law the declaration must include a DPE energy-performance certificate, with all listings to be declared through the national portal by 20 May 2026.
A secondary residence, or any unit beyond the primary-home allowance, additionally requires a change-of-use authorisation (changement d'usage). Lyon enforces this with a compensation rule: in tense housing areas you may have to convert equivalent floor space back into housing before the authorisation is granted, and time-limited permits can run up to nine years. Anyone managing in Lyon should confirm a property's exact status and secure registration and any change-of-use authorisation before listing.
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* Calculations based on 30 days/month. Actual results may vary depending on market, season, property type, and implemented strategy.
Over the June 2025 to May 2026 analysis period, Lyon averaged 64% occupancy, equal to roughly 229 booked nights a year. That sits about three points above the French national average of around 61%, making Lyon a dependable, mid-table performer on fill. The catch is rate: its 93 EUR ADR is among the lowest of the French cities we track, so monthly revenue averages about 1,645 EUR.
October and September are the strongest months, driven by the autumn congress and trade-fair season at Eurexpo and Part-Dieu. The Fete des Lumieres (5-8 December 2026) is the standout winter spike worth a premium, and Nuits de Fourviere (28 May to 25 July 2026) supports summer. With a very flat seasonality index of 41, Lyon rewards steady year-round occupancy more than a single high season.
Yes. Every furnished tourist rental must be registered with the town hall, and the declaration now requires a DPE energy certificate, filed through the national portal by 20 May 2026. From 1 January 2026 an entire primary residence can be let a maximum of 90 nights a year. A secondary residence also needs a change-of-use authorisation, which in Lyon can trigger a housing-compensation requirement.
The central Presqu'ile around Place Bellecour commands the steadiest demand and best rates thanks to its walkability and dining. Vieux Lyon suits first-time leisure visitors, while Part-Dieu, beside the main TGV station and office towers, captures reliable midweek corporate bookings. Croix-Rousse draws design-led, longer-stay guests at gentler prices, and the modern Confluence district is growing but more event-dependent.