How to Write Amenity Descriptions That Rank and Still Sound Like You
There’s a copy-and-paste bullet list living on roughly every apartment website in America, and it reads something like this: resort-style pool, state-of-the-art fitness center, wood-look flooring throughout. Maybe a gourmet kitchen if the budget allowed for quartz. You’ve read it a hundred times. So has every prospect comparing you to three other communities on their shortlist.
That’s the problem with amenity descriptions. The amenities are the same across the industry, and the words we use to describe them: also the same. Tour 10 communities in the same submarket and you’ll see the same pool, the same fixtures, the same fitness center, all described in the same handful of phrases that have lost any power to mean something. The list is required to explain what you have on-site—but it doesn’t do the work of marketing what you really offer.
So let’s talk about how to write amenity copy that earns its place twice over: findable by the search engines and AI tools doing the matching, and distinctive enough that a real person reading it can picture their actual life in your community, not other.
Resort-Style Pool, State-of-the-Art Fitness Center, Wood-Look Flooring
Try reading your amenities page outloud—and then read a competitor’s. If you simply swapped three lines of writing between the two pages, could you catch it?
For most communities, the answer is no, and that’s not a knock on the marketer who wrote it. These phrases became standard because they’re efficient. “Resort-style pool” tells you the pool is big and nicely landscaped without making you write a paragraph. “State-of-the-art fitness center” signals the equipment isn’t a sad treadmill from 2009. “Wood-look flooring” tells a prospect they get the warm look without the warping. The shorthand works as shorthand.
But it shouldn’t become a shortcut, and the whole description. A prospect reads “luxury apartments offering resort-style living and state-of-the-art amenities” and learns nothing, because that sentence—they’ve read it somewhere else already. It’s not descriptive… ‘cause it’s not original. The words are doing the opposite of their job. What should differentiate has suddenly camouflaged.
The Amenity List Still Has a Job to Do in Search
Before we throw the amenity list out entirely, remember: People search by amenity. Constantly. Keep it. But change it up.
Prospective residents aren’t typing your community name into Google, because they don’t know it yet. They’re typing “apartments with in-unit laundry near me” or asking their phone “two bedroom apartments with a dog park in Tempe.” The amenity is the search. According to the NMHC and Grace Hill Renter Preferences Survey, an in-unit washer and dryer sits at the very top of what renters want, with the overwhelming majority interested and a real monthly premium attached. That’s not a vibe. That’s a feature people will pay more to get and will search specifically to find.
Which means the exact words matter. If your page says “thoughtfully appointed laundry solutions” instead of “in-unit washer and dryer,” you’ve written something so fancy it will get skipped by the exact searcher who wanted it. The same goes for the AI answer engines now standing between renters and your website. When someone asks ChatGPT or Google’s AI Mode for “pet-friendly apartments with a gym in Charlotte,” those tools read across the web and build an answer from whatever your site says. Generic, vague, or overdressed copy gives them nothing concrete to grab. We made the larger case for this in our piece on SEO copywriting for apartments, and the apartment website specialists at Resi and Jonah Digital have been sounding the same alarm: a thin or fluffed-up page doesn’t get surfaced, it disappears.
So the amenity terms stay. The pet policy, the in-unit laundry, the parking, the square footage, the floor plan names, all of it written in the plain words people search and say aloud.
A Feature Tells. A Benefit Is Why Anyone Cares.
This is where most amenity copy stalls out: it lists features and assumes the benefit is obvious. Sometimes it is. Mostly it isn’t, and the benefit gets leases signed.
A feature is a fact about the property. A waterfall island. A 24-hour fitness center. A rooftop dog run. A benefit is what that fact does for the person reading it. The waterfall island is where you’ll seat your in-laws at Thanksgiving instead of exiling two of them to the hallway. The 24-hour fitness center is the 6 a.m. workout you can finally do before the kids wake up, and the gym membership you stop paying for. The rooftop dog run is not having to take the elevator down and walk half a block in February every time the dog gives you that look.
Same amenities. Different interpretation. The feature gets you found. The benefit gets you leased. The best amenity descriptions name the feature in searchable language and then, in the very next breath, hand the reader the small specific moment that feature unlocks in their life. You don’t need to do it for all 40 amenities. You need to do it for the few that matter most to the resident you’re chasing, so start getting to know your ideal resident (IRP)!
The Spec Sheet Is Not the Brand
Now for the part the whole industry keeps skipping. A complete, accurate, searchable list of features is a spec sheet. It is necessary. It is also not a brand, and it will never make your community feel like anything other than a building with stuff in it.
Multifamily has been swimming in a sea of sameness for years. The buildings look alike, the finishes are converging, and now, with AI-generated copy popping up all over the place, it’s no surprise: the building descriptions sound alike, too. Same amenity lists, same neighborhood blurbs, same “luxury living redefined” headline. When the product is hard to tell apart, the words become your last stand. So, giving up on copy? You’ve just laid your cards on the table. Waved the white flag. Given in.
But: Branding. That’s what can slice through all that—your verbal identity (voice, positioning, how your community talks and what it stands for). Funnel your IRP research into your amenity descriptions, and you’ve got yourself a winner. A community for young downtown professionals and a 55-and-better community in the suburbs can have the identical pool. But NOT identical descriptions. One pool is where you’ll recover on a Sunday after a long week. The other is where the grandkids will beg to stay an extra hour. The amenity is a commodity. The story you tell about it is not.
What a Good Amenity Description Does
Strip it down and a strong amenity description is juggling a few things at once, (seemingly) effortlessly.
It keeps the searchable term intact, so the people and the machines looking for that amenity can find it. It leads with, or quickly lands on, the human payoff, so the reader feels something instead of scanning a checklist. It stays specific enough that it could only be describing your community, which is exactly what helps an AI tool tell you apart from the property next door when a renter asks it to compare. And it sounds like you, consistently, so that by the time someone has read three amenity descriptions they’ve started to get a feel for who this community is, the same way you start to get a read on a person a few minutes into a conversation.
What it doesn’t do is reach for the worn-out adjective when a real detail would do more work. “Spacious gourmet kitchen” asks the reader to take your word for it. “An island with enough counter space for two people to cook at once” shows them. Specificity is the most underused tool in amenity copy, and it happens to serve search and persuasion at the same time, because a concrete detail is both more memorable to a person and more citable to a machine.
Keep the Keyword Where It Counts, Then Let Loose
The fear I hear most often is reasonable: if I optimize my amenity copy, won’t I flatten my voice into the same beige paste as everyone else? Yes, if you optimize everything. So aim to optimize the spots that move the needle and leave the rest of the copy free.
Search engines and AI tools pay close attention to a few load-bearing places. The page title. The first hundred words or so. The subheadings. The alt text on your photos. Put your real amenity terms there, in plain language, and you’ve covered the part of the page the machines weigh most. They care less about whether your third paragraph cracks a joke or paints a picture. That paragraph is yours. So is most of the page.
This is also why over-stuffing amenity copy backfires now. Repeating “luxury apartments with luxury amenities in our luxury community” is skipped by humans and AI engines alike. It’s not clear or trustworthy, being stuffed like that. No ranking, no human reader. No wins. Use the amenity term where it counts, say it the way a person would say it, and let related language carry the rest, the neighborhood, the floor plan names, the small details only your community has.
And when a line is doing real emotional (branding) work, protect it. The keyword can go somewhere else. There’s rarely another spot for the sentence that makes someone feel something.
One Pool, Two Completely Different Stories
A quick illustration, same amenity, written for two different communities.
The generic version, the one everybody writes: “Take a dip in our resort-style pool, the perfect place to relax and unwind in a luxury setting.” Come on, that could be any property in the country! It leans on two phrases the industry has worn down to nothing and can’t give a person or a search engine a single thing to hold onto.
For a downtown community chasing young professionals: “A saltwater pool on the eighth-floor deck, with skyline views and enough loungers that you won’t be circling for one at 5 p.m. on a Saturday. The unofficial Sunday recovery zone.”
For a family-focused suburban community: “A zero-entry pool with a shallow end the little ones can stand in, shaded cabanas for the grown-ups, and a grill area built for the kind of Saturday that turns into six families and a lot of hot dogs.”
Same pool, pretty much. Both versions name the solid features a searcher and an AI tool can use. Both hand the reader a moment they can see themselves inside. And crucially, you could never swap them, because each one sounds like the community it belongs to. That’s the whole game.
Where to Start With Your Own List
You don’t need to rewrite all forty amenities this afternoon. Start with the handful that drive your leases, the ones your ideal resident cares about most, and run each through three quick checks.
- Does it use the plain word someone would search and say out loud, or did it get dressed up into something unsearchable?
- Does it give the reader the benefit, the real moment in their life this unlocks, or does it just state the feature and hope?
- And does it sound like your community specifically, or like a template that forgot to fill in the name?
Get those three right on your highest-impact amenities and you’ll already be ahead of most of your comp set, who are still copying and pasting “resort-style pool” and wondering why the page isn’t converting.
The deeper work of your community’s voice (deciding what your community sounds like in the first place, to align every description) is its own project. And it’s the part that makes all the copywriting downstream easy. That’s the work we love at Zipcode Creative. If your amenity list reads like everyone else’s and you’d like it to sound like the only community worth touring, let’s talk about your project.
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