Airbnb Answers: Guest profile photos

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Airbnb Answers: Guest profile photos

Update: January, 2019

 

A few months ago, we told you about some changes Airbnb was making to the way guest profile photos are displayed. You can read the original post, below.

 

Now that those changes are being introduced gradually, we want to make sure you have all the information you need. Here’s a recap of what will be changing, along with some tips.

 

 

New photo process

Moving forward, rather than displaying a potential guest’s profile photo before the booking is accepted, you’ll receive a guest’s photo after you’ve accepted the booking request. If you have Instant Book turned on, you won’t notice a change to the booking process.

 

Airbnb does not require guests to have profile photos. Although most guests provide a photo, some have told us they don’t want to share a picture of themselves when booking, and we listened.

 

At the same time, many of you told us that you value guest profile photos, and we listened to you, too. That’s why we’ve introduced a new option for hosts to be able to customize their own booking requirements.

 

New host control

You now have the option to require that your guests provide a profile photo. Again, the photo will be visible to you only after you accept the booking request. If you’d like to require your guests to provide a profile photo, you’ll need to turn on the control option in your settings for each of your listings, either on mobile or on web. Specifically:

 

On mobile:

  1. Go to the listing you’d like to require profile photos for
  2. Tap Booking settings
  3. Tap Guest requirements
  4. Look for the Profile photo section and tap Edit
  5. Tap Require a profile photo
  6. Tap Save


On web:

  1. From your host dashboard, click Listings
  2. Click Booking settings
  3. Next to Guest requirements, click Edit
  4. Check the box next to Profile photo
  5. Click Save

 

If you take this step and a potential guest doesn’t already have a profile photo, they’ll be prompted to upload one before they can request to book your space. A guest’s profile photo will not be available to you until after you accept the booking request. If the guest doesn’t want to provide a photo, then they won’t be able to book your space. 

 

Additional support

If you choose to require that your guests have a profile photo and one of your potential guests uploads an image that doesn’t show their face—a photo of a sunset or their dog, for instance—then you can call Airbnb’s Community Support. They’ll work with you to address the issue, and if you feel uncomfortable hosting someone without a photo that shows their face, you can request to cancel the reservation penalty-free.

 

As a reminder, Airbnb’s nondiscrimination policy prohibits hosts from making booking decisions or canceling reservations based on race, color, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, or marital status. 

 

As an extra step, as always, you can require guests to provide a government ID to Airbnb in order to be able to book your space. You can read more about that process here.

 

Why these changes are important

We talked with lots of hosts and guests about profile photos, and we think these changes satisfy the core concerns and feedback we heard. We’ll be paying close attention to how these changes to profile photos affect our community, and will continue working to improve and simplify the process to ensure you feel comfortable hosting. We hope you’ll share your feedback with us so we can continue to build a community where everyone can belong. Thank you for hosting.

 

 

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October, 2018

 

You've been asking a lot about guest profile photos, and Airbnb has been working on new policies to address your concerns. Here is an update from Airbnb:

 

Today, we’re announcing some changes we will be making to the way we display guest profile photos.

 

Moving forward, rather than displaying a potential guest’s profile photo before the booking is accepted, hosts will receive a guest’s photo in the booking process only after they’ve accepted the booking request. Airbnb does not require all guests to provide a photo. Instead, we’ll be giving hosts the option to ask their guests to provide a profile photo, which will only be presented to hosts after they accept the booking. We have discussed some of this work in the past and we want you to know more about the changes we will be making in the coming months.

 

We have participated in a number of conversations with hosts and guests regarding this topic. We have listened to our community, and while most guests provide a photo, some guests told us they don’t want to share a picture of themselves when booking. We also recognize that concerns have been raised about the potential for photos to be misused in a way that violates our nondiscrimination policy.

 

At the same time, hosts have told us that they value profile photos because they can help hosts and guests get to know one another before a trip begins and help hosts recognize guests when they check in. Additionally, we’ve seen how photos can be a useful tool for enhancing trust and promoting community.

 

We want to balance these concerns. Airbnb does not require guests to provide a profile photo when booking a listing and, as we discussed earlier this summer with our hosts, we will be implementing a series of changes in the months ahead:

 

  • If a guest chooses to provide a profile photo, that profile photo won’t be displayed to the host as part of the booking process until after the booking is confirmed.
  • Because some hosts value profile photos and want to be able to know who they can expect at their front door, we will give hosts the option to ask that guests provide a profile photo prior to booking, which will only be presented to the host after the host accepts the booking request. This new option comes with important safeguards that are designed to ensure our community is fair and open to everyone:
    • Hosts must turn on this feature for each of their listings proactively, before they receive a reservation request.
    • If a host asks for a profile photo, we’ll prompt guests to upload one to their Airbnb profile before they can request to book that host’s particular listing; however, the photo will not be presented to the host until after the booking is confirmed.

 

If a host cancels a reservation after they see a guest’s photo, the guest will have an easy way to contact Airbnb and report any concerns about potential discrimination by the host in violation of our nondiscrimination policy and Community Commitment. If any guest believes he or she has been discriminated against and notifies our team, we’ll immediately help them book an alternative listing consistent with our Open Doors Policy, investigate the report, and take appropriate action. Any host who violates our nondiscrimination policy may be permanently banned from using Airbnb.

 

This announcement follows the commitment we made in 2016 to evaluate how we display guest profile photos in the booking process. As we implement these changes in the coming months, we hope you’ll share your feedback with us so we can continue to make thoughtful changes that make the Airbnb community a place where everyone can belong.

 

1,229 Replies 1,229

One small correction: Airbnb is a private company, and therefore it’s stock cannot go way down, as you wrote. As a private company it can get away while publicly traded companies cannot

Just be smart about who you let into your home

Airbnb is going to Wall street this year!

It will be a different ballgame. A Publicly traded company needs to abide with many many rules.... And if the stockholders will conceive this recent 'no photo’ as a risk - the stock will go down!

So, yes, as a publicly traded company — Airbnb will grow ears and LISTEN!!!

in the meantime, just be careful who you let into your home

Hi Oad,

 

Of course I'm smart about who I let in but Airbnb penalizes for being smart. 😃

 

Natalie

There are a few loopholes (tricks) that we and others discovered over the years. How to reject a reservation request without impacting your acceptance rate. How to remove a bad review after it was posted (one of our guests showed it to us). 

So we are learning & adjusting as we continue this journey 

@Oad0 Wow, can you explain that?! Thanks!

@Jared-And-Natalie0

There's a backdoor way to unfreeze your listing.  Once you delcine the guest, wait a few minuntes, then go into your calendar, click on the date(s) and "unblock" them manually by clikcing on "available."

Thank you, @Susan1028. I have decided that I'm going to honor the reservations that I have accepted and not accept any more requests by blocking out the rest of available dates. After my last reservation I will shutdown my account and continue on with another company. I cannot live with Airbnb's new rules and I suspect that if they choose to keep them something terrible will happen. It's outragous that they demand and make us accept these new rules and pay a penalty fee if we change our mind for whatever reason. However, I would rather pay a fee than have a life lost. You cannot bring back a life lost. Phew, scary.

Николай10
Level 4
Kaliningrad, Russia

Dear Hosts, Michael from Cologne, Germany

made a petition on change.org. Please support it. I do not know how to give a link of this petition to rest pool of hosts. I beleive if ALL hosts to receive this link, all they will certainly sign it. Its just many hosts do not pay visit to community and simply do not know about petition's existence...Any Idea how to spread it among rest of hosts?..

I think gioing to the press would get some attention...along with  a Twitter storm!

Ray206
Level 2
Boise, ID

Airbnb needs to setup a host and a guest panel of super host and experienced guest and let them make the rules then negotiate with each other for old and new rules then Airbnb needs to enforce them by the book. 

@Ray71

 

That's really sweet logic, and I agree.  How many time have you tried to speak or write to anyone at ABB? 

Peta7
Level 10
Johannesburg, South Africa

Analysis of host vs platform owners / guest contest as recently announced, apparently by Airbnb's very own Idi Amin:

First in favor of the guest:

NEW AIRBNB REVIEW POLICY:

Then again in favor of the guest:

NEW AIRBNB CANCELLATION POLICY:

and now another in favor of the guest:

NEW AIRBNB PROFILE PHOTO POLICY:

And in favor of the host we have:

PROMISED REVISED REVIEW GUIDELINES NOT IMPLEMENTED TO DATE.

Although we realize like most others that our plea for sanity will fall on deaf ears the following is our penny’s worth:

First of all; we believe any major platform shift without consulting all platform users to be unfair business practice and believe that especially in modern times such practice should be buried along with dictatorship, despotism, autocracy, authoritarianism and tyranny despised so much in our time.

An old saying in contention to unnecessary transformation alleges that “Nothing succeeds like success” Hopefully the highly esteemed Airbnb team are not pursuing competitor platform policies for the sake of evolution.

We have just removed our listings from such a competitor platform operating without profile photos nor any recourse after cancellation, even with a strict cancellation policy in place and with no importance attached to reviews at all. The foremost reason for removal was to distance ourselves from such platforms believed to be used mainly for Visa acquiring purposes and possibly by Drug lords and Human trafficking syndicates.

Personal experience taught that less than 15% of the immense number of bookings received from such platforms materialize with the remaining more than 75 % being unresponsive and end up as ‘no shows’ thereby leaving the platform calendars blocked for long periods even although no intention of a stay ever existed, this practice is obviously considered much worse than ‘cancellation with ill motive’ and makes cross platform calendar syncing completely impracticable.

Another concern is that management is taking the ‘Airbnb Hell’ site seriously with blogs mainly from ignorant disgruntled users unable to get a refund from a listing with a strict cancelation clause in place; as this will surely be considered a text book case of “the blind leading the blind”?

After all is said we read Airbnb platform content that really proves to be confusing and we quote:

“Clear frontal face photos are an important way for hosts and guests to learn about each other.” The only word that comes to mind upon reading this platform statement is ……a common SA term often used by locals….’eish’….. meaning there is no words to express….

Therefor this plea to senior management to again revert back to the old Airbnb once considered by many users as the booking platform of choice being miles ahead of all competitors and to once again pursue a feeling of all platform users belonging and to remove the new blatant animosity now existing between guests / platform owners and hosts alike caused by extremely unfair and unnecessary platform policy shifts without prior consultation.

Jo13
Level 10
Durban, South Africa

@Peta7

 

This whole profile photo debacle can be encapsulated in that most expressive eish!

 

-Jo (Durban)

Peta7
Level 10
Johannesburg, South Africa

Although we realize like most others that our plea for sanity will fall on deaf ears the following is our penny’s worth:

First of all; we believe any major platform shift without consulting all platform users to be an unfair business practice and believe that especially in modern times such practice should be buried along with dictatorship, despotism, autocracy, authoritarianism and tyranny despised so much in our time.

An old saying in contention to unnecessary transformation alleges that “Nothing succeeds like success” Hopefully the highly esteemed Airbnb team are not pursuing competitor platform policies for the sake of evolution.

We have just removed our listings from such a competitor platform operating without profile photos nor any recourse after cancellation, even with a strict cancellation policy in place and with no importance attached to reviews at all. The foremost reason for removal was to distance ourselves from such platforms believed to be used mainly for Visa acquiring purposes and possibly by Drug lords and Human trafficking syndicates.

Personal experience taught that less than 15% of the immense number of bookings received from such platforms materialize with the remaining more than 75 % being unresponsive and end up as ‘no shows’ thereby leaving the platform calendars blocked for long periods even although no intention of a stay ever existed, this practice is obviously considered much worse than ‘cancellation with ill motive’ and makes cross platform calendar syncing completely impracticable.

Another concern is that management is taking the ‘Airbnb Hell’ site seriously with blogs mainly from ignorant disgruntled users unable to get a refund from a listing with a strict cancelation clause in place; as this will surely be considered a text book case of “the blind leading the blind”?

After all is said we read Airbnb platform content that really proves to be confusing and we quote:

“Clear frontal face photos are an important way for hosts and guests to learn about each other.” The only word that comes to mind upon reading this platform statement is ……a common SA term often used by locals….’eish’….. meaning there is no words to express….

Therefor this plea to senior management to again revert back to the old Airbnb once considered by many users as the booking platform of choice being miles ahead of all competitors and to once again pursue a feeling of all platform users belonging and to remove the new blatant animosity now existing between guests and hosts alike caused by extremely unfair and unnecessary platform policy shifts without prior consultation.