Curious about the performance of short-term rentals in Solingen, Germany? Over the last year, the average occupancy rate was 61% with an ADR (Average Daily Rate) of 86€. Hosts earned on average 1466€ per month.

90-day occupancy forecast for Solingen so you can update rates and stay ahead of competitors.
Key metrics to optimize your pricing strategy
Avg. Monthly Revenue
1466€
$1334 USD
YoY Revenue Change
7%
vs. previous year
Occupancy Rate
61%
~18 days/month
Average Daily Rate
86€
$78 USD
Seasonality Index
45%
demand variation
Best Months
October, August
peak season
Worst Months
February, January
low season
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Over the analysis period, Solingen ran 61% average occupancy across about 219 booked nights a year, one point below the 62% German national average in ListingOK's sample and broadly in line with its national peers. Its 79 dollar average daily rate is the lowest of these five cities, reflecting a value-oriented, work-driven market, and average monthly revenue of about 1,342 dollars per listing is correspondingly modest.
The encouraging signals are a 5% year-on-year revenue gain, a positive against the declines several markets posted, and the very low 45% seasonality index, which confirms unusually even, predictable demand. Read together, the numbers describe a stable, low-rate but dependable market: occupancy is solid and consistent, pricing is not premium, and the steady year-round fill, rather than any peak season, is what makes the economics work for a well-run, well-located unit.
Average occupancy rate by month in Solingen, compared with the same month a year earlier.
| Month | Occupancy | Prior year |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 2025 | 58.9% | 58.6% |
| Aug 2025 | 66.1% | 64.7% |
| Sep 2025 | 54.6% | 60.2% |
| Oct 2025 | 68.4% | 61.4% |
| Nov 2025 | 57.8% | 64.5% |
| Dec 2025 | 58.3% | 60.6% |
| Jan 2026 | 45.7% | 51.5% |
| Feb 2026 | 60.1% | 54.4% |
| Mar 2026 | 60% | 61.2% |
| Apr 2026 | 62.9% | 54% |
| May 2026 | 68.1% | 58.2% |
| Jun 2026 | 53.8% | 52.8% |
📌 Historical trends reveal seasonal highs – plan accordingly.
These figures reflect real-time demand in Solingen, helping you plan and price strategically.
Solingen is a mid-sized industrial city in North Rhine-Westphalia's Bergisches Land, and its short-term rental demand is shaped by business and location rather than by mass tourism. Known worldwide as the Klingenstadt, the City of Blades, for its centuries-old cutlery and knife industry, the city draws trade visitors, manufacturing contractors and suppliers, alongside the German Blade Museum (Deutsches Klingenmuseum) and a modest stream of heritage and nature visitors exploring the wooded Bergisches Land.
Its strongest demand driver, though, is position within the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region. Solingen sits close to Wuppertal, Düsseldorf and Cologne and is well connected by rail, so it functions as an affordable lodging base for trade-fair attendees, business travellers and project workers priced out of the larger neighbouring cities. That gives the market a steady, work-led demand profile with less reliance on a tourist high season than a beach or city-break destination.
Solingen has the flattest demand profile in this group, with a low 45% seasonality index, the hallmark of a business-led market where occupancy holds steadily across the year rather than spiking in summer. The strongest months are October and August, with October 2025 reaching 68.4% and a broad band of months sitting in the high 50s to mid 60s; the weakest are February and January, with January 2026 the trough at 45.7%.
The pattern reflects business and project travel rather than leisure seasons: autumn trade activity and late-summer demand lift the figures modestly, while the deep winter is the only genuinely soft stretch and even that does not collapse. For operators the practical implication is steadiness, monthly revenue is predictable and less dependent on a few peak weeks, so the strategy is consistent occupancy and competitive midweek pricing rather than aggressive seasonal surges.
Solingen-Mitte, the central district around the main shopping streets and transport links, is the most practical base for the city's business-led guests, offering walkable amenities and quick rail access toward Wuppertal, Düsseldorf and Cologne. Ohligs, built around the Solingen Hauptbahnhof, is the key transport hub and suits travellers prioritising train connections to the wider Rhine-Ruhr region.
Gräfrath, a picturesque historic quarter and home to the German Blade Museum, offers character and appeals to the heritage-minded visitor, while Wald and Höhscheid provide quieter residential options for longer project stays. Across these districts the decisive factors are rail access for commuting workers and proximity to the industrial estates that generate much of the business demand, rather than tourist-quarter prestige.
Solingen falls under Germany's federal framework and North Rhine-Westphalia's housing law, principally the Wohnraumstärkungsgesetz NRW, which governs the misuse of residential space (Zweckentfremdung). Under the NRW regime a property can generally be let short-term without special approval up to a limited number of weeks per year, beyond which the use can count as Zweckentfremdung and require municipal authorisation, with breaches treated as administrative offences carrying substantial fines.
NRW has also been rolling out a Wohnraum-ID registration ID for short-term lets to improve oversight, and stricter tenant-protection rules apply in designated tight housing markets. Whether the toughest provisions bite in Solingen depends on whether the city has adopted a local Zweckentfremdung ordinance and registration requirement, which can change. Because the rules turn on municipal adoption and annual-day limits, an operator should confirm the current requirements, any Wohnraum-ID obligation and permitted-use thresholds directly with the Stadt Solingen 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.
Solingen averaged about 61% occupancy over the analysis period, roughly 219 booked nights a year. That is one point below the 62% German national average in ListingOK's sample and broadly in line with its peers, reflecting a steady, business-led market in the Rhine-Ruhr region rather than a tourist-driven one.
October and August are the strongest months, with October 2025 near 68% and much of the year holding in the high 50s to mid 60s, driven by business and project travel rather than a tourist season. February and January are the softest, with January 2026 around 46%. With a low 45% seasonality index, demand is unusually even, so focus on consistent occupancy over seasonal surges.
Possibly. Solingen falls under NRW's housing law and the Zweckentfremdung rules, which generally allow limited short-term letting per year before municipal authorisation is needed, with fines for breaches, and NRW is introducing a Wohnraum-ID registration. Whether the strictest provisions apply depends on whether the city has adopted a local ordinance, so confirm current requirements and any registration obligation with the Stadt Solingen before listing.
Solingen-Mitte suits business guests with central amenities and rail links, while Ohligs around the Hauptbahnhof is the key transport hub for travellers connecting across the Rhine-Ruhr region. Gräfrath offers historic character near the German Blade Museum, and Wald and Höhscheid suit quieter, longer project stays. Rail access and proximity to industrial estates matter more than tourist-quarter prestige.