Gcl States New Vacation Rental Home Portal Grabs 120 Million Vacationers

New York, New york, February 19, 2014 – A convenient and easy-to-read chart located at http://www.rentmyvacationhome.com shows the average people that visit each website per month. By filling out one easy to use form that changes 115 sites immediately.

Next, the real estate sites then picks up these changes on the new Rent My Vacation Home.com company Internet portal. The portal automatically submits the Vacation Homes to not only the 115 sites controlled by Rent My Vacation Home.com but All the 3rd party sites listed at http://www.rentmyvacationhome.com.

First, vacation owners join the network by either paying $99 for the year or on a free commission only basis of 9%. After the Vacation Homeowner makes the listing it is then transferred onto large network servers.

By using large servers located throughout the United States the vacation rental data is transferred within seconds across the Internet. The fiber optic lines that make up the Rent My Vacation Home.com network are some of the fastest Mbps Internet connections in the industry along with large quad Pentium servers strategically located in different parts of the United States.

Over 100 sites and offices receive the changes immediately and then the information is filtered to large third-party real estate firms that distribute the listings even further. At the end of the cycle the vacation listing appears in front of 120 million vacationers each month.

This technology using network distribution to hundreds of portals is new to the vacation rental industry. Vacation Homeowners now do not have to try and promote their home using hundreds of passwords and sites.

The new Vacation Rental network system presented by Rent My Vacation Home .com enables one distribution point for advertisement to Vacationers from Homeowners. Vacationers can use the system knowing that Rent My Vacation Home.com guarantees the stay on their reservation system and Vacation Homeowners are offered a refund if they do not receive rentals.

For more information about Rent My Vacation Home dot com please go to http://www.rentmyvacationhome.com/ and also call them at 1-800-699-7684 with an email address of info(at)rentmyvacationhome(dot)com.

Press Contact:
Jay Kalin
Rent My Vacation Home
New York, New york
+1 (800) 699-7684

Vacation Rentals Rent My Vacation Home

The Us Car Rental Market Is Expected To Grow At A Cagr Of 5.25% In The Next 5 Years

The market in the long run is expected to be more efficient with players moving towards the car sharing market in the densely populated areas such as Washington DC, New York and others. Additionally, opaque and online car rental segment will gain momentum with several leisure travelers switching to online reservations for relatively cheap rentals. The reduced fleet size and efficient yield management policy adapted by the players will also certainly change the course of the operations of the US car rental industry in the long run. It is expected that the market will grow at a CAGR of 5.25% in the next 5 years and will reach USD ~ million by 2015.
The future projections are presented along with the cause and effect relationship between the market and several industry and macro-economic indicators providing an insight on the prospects in the US car rental market.
The car rental market in the US is a mature market which was valued at USD ~ million with ~ million cars in service in 2010. The market has consolidated over the period with a wave of several mergers and acquisitions which has strengthened the position of few players and has created complexities for the new entrants due to high initial costs and reduced economies of scale. The US car rental market is predominantly dependent on the behavior of the travelers. Total visitors using car rental services has risen from ~ thousand in 2005 to ~ thousand in 2010 propelling the growth of the US car rental market.
Key Topics Covered in the Report:
The market size of the US car rental industry and its segments including on-airport, off-airport, domestic and overseas car rental travelers, online/opaque car rental market on the basis of revenue, users and cars in services
Market segmentation of the US car rental industry and its segments
Recent trends and developments in the industry
Competitive landscape/ market share of the various players operating in the country in off-airport, on-airport and total car rental market
Future outlook and projections along with the cause and effect relationship between the market and industry factors on the US car rental industry
Company profiles of major car rental agencies including company overview, business strategies, financial and operating performance and SWOT analysis
For more information please refer to the below mentioned link:
http://ammindpower.com/report.php?A=229

Avoiding The Most Expensive Car Rental Cities

Figuring out what a decent price for a rental car is versus a complete rip-off is not nearly as easy to determine as one might initially think. Rates vary depending on which company, which city, and which day it is. Strangely enough, it is not unheard of to get four different quotes on how much it would cost to rent a car on four consecutive days. One of the things that kills car renters wallets, is not doing the research to learn what the local fees and taxes on car rentals are.

In fact, local and state taxes make up an extremely high amount of the total car rental cost. In the 100 most heavily trafficked U.S. airports, the airport itself, and demanded rent was often a problem. Such add-ons averaged nearly 26 percent of the entire cost, compared with a 14 percent average for off-airport locations. In some cities the gap between on-airport and off-airport costs is nearly unbelievable. In Dallas, for example, 61.4 percent of the total cost of renting a car at the airport came from taxes, while taxes at nearby neighborhood locations only made up 17 percent of the total. Like most taxes, these just continue to grow.

The most expensive cities in the United States to rent a car (the taxes are so high that it actually is an absurd idea for most people to even think about renting a vehicle here) are Boston, New York, and Houston. In all three cities rates can easily almost double over what was advertised. At Houston’s Intercontinental Airport, if you rent a car for two days at $50 per day, you’d expect your bill to be about $100. Once taxes and fees are added in, watch out, because you will owe a minimum of $171. Aside from the big three, some of the other worst rental rates from airports include Austin, Cleveland, Dallas/Fort Worth and New Orleans. No matter what city you are in, it is often a good idea to rent from centers away from the airport. They will always be cheaper.

Taxes and fees (which are often much higher in cities that need funds for construction of convention centers or stadiums) can increase your final bill by up to 70 percent. Watch out for these cities, watch out for the taxes. While it may be uavoidable, really weigh your options. Is it really worth this much to rent a car instead of using public transportation? At the very least, find a rental center away from the airport. It might be a little inconvienent, but at least you save yourself something, which in high tax cities, migh end up being more than just a few pennies; it might be a small bundle.