Pasting your password into the welcome book gets messy. A printed QR code on the kitchen counter or back of the front door means guests are connected before they unpack.
Hosts who care about the small details get reviewed for them. A framed wifi card sits next to the candle and the hand-written welcome note. We've curated six styles that work for short-term rentals — refined, calm, and on-brand for most listings.
For hosts and guesthouses. Warm linen palette, refined serif, a friendly terracotta accent.
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Boutique hotel calm. Warm cream paper, italic serif headline, terracotta eyebrow.
A boutique hotel after dark. Forest green walls, brass accents, candlelit serif.
Soft sage paper with a delicate botanical sensibility. For garden flats and slow afternoons.
Sky-blue paper, a sandy accent, an ocean wave for a divider. Salt air with the wifi.
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Quiet and architectural. White paper, asymmetric type, light sans-serif.
For most listings, Host (warm linen) is the safest pick. Villa works for older homes; Coastal for beach rentals; Botanical for plant-heavy interiors; Hotel Brass for after-dark moodier stays.