Strengthening our commitment to community standards

Airbnb
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Strengthening our commitment to community standards

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Hosts around the world have told us how much hosting means to them—personally and financially—and how rewarding great guest experiences can be. On the flip side, a bad experience with a guest can be frustrating and, in rare cases, even disruptive. We know these moments can meaningfully impact you and your time, money, and local community.

 

You’ve also given us feedback that you’d like us to hold the entire community, both hosts and guests, to the same high standards. We agree. That’s why in early 2020, we’ll be rolling out enhanced guest standards that set higher expectations for a trustworthy community. 

 

Establishing stronger guest standards

Our new Guest Standards Policy will clarify what Airbnb expects of guests, with the goal of ensuring that hosts can consistently have more positive experiences. When a guest doesn’t meet one of the standards outlined in the policy, they’ll receive a warning with education around how to be a better guest. We’ll track and weigh infractions (based on their severity), and repeated infractions may lead to suspension or removal of a guest from the platform. 

 

These guest standards build upon existing policies we already have in place to address the more serious trust and safety issues that result in immediate removal from the platform. We’re enhancing our system to better monitor for guests who engage in less serious misconduct, so that we can educate and take appropriate action against those guests. 

 

By setting clear standards, staffing teams to take action, and putting technology in place to track noncompliance, we expect to improve overall guest behavior and increase community trust. 

 

So what are the standards?

The new guest standards address some of the most common concerns expressed by our host community, and support our broader efforts to address parties that are unauthorized or disturb the community. Beginning in early 2020, the new policy will cover these five scenarios:

 

  1. Excessive noise: A disruptive level of noise, like loud music, prolonged shouting, or repeated pounding or stomping. It does not include complaints about minor or short-term disruptions (like a loud phone call) or noise that can’t be avoided (like walking up and down the stairs).
  2. Major cleanliness concerns: Anything that requires excessive cleaning after a guest checks out. This means extensive amounts of trash, debris, or food strewn throughout the property. It does not mean minor messes (like food left in the fridge or bagged trash left next to a trash can) or anything that could be considered part of normal wear and tear or turnover (like unwashed linens or a dirty kitchen).
  3. Unauthorized guests: When more guests stay overnight or visit the space than the host has authorized for that reservation.
  4. Unauthorized parking: When a guest or one of their visitors parks in an area that the host designated as off-limits, or when a guest or their visitors exceeds the number of cars that the host allows to park at the property, as set out in the listing description.
  5. Unauthorized smoking: When a guest or one of their visitors smokes inside the listing and the listing description prohibits smoking (this includes the use of tobacco, marijuana, e-cigarettes, etc.).

 

The new Guest Standards Policy kicks in when it’s been determined that a guest has engaged in one of these behaviors. Hosts may report a violation, and we’ll also accept reports of excessive noise through our Neighbor Reporting tool or from local law enforcement. 

 

What you can do 

We encourage you to clearly outline what you expect of guests in your House Rules, listing description, and messages to your guests. It’s particularly important to specify your rules around parking, extra guests, and smoking so we know if it should be considered “unauthorized” under the policy. When a guest fails to uphold these standards, it’s important to begin by addressing the issue with them directly—this is often the quickest path to resolution. In all cases, be ready to provide evidence that demonstrates a rule has been broken, whether that’s photos of excessive trash left in your space, an emailed complaint from a neighbor, or some other documentation. 

 

What comes next 

The second phase of the rollout will include additional scenarios we know are top of mind for you, like late checkouts, late check-ins, and unauthorized pets. Our goal is to roll out these additional standards later in 2020. Over time, and with your feedback, we expect to cover even more situations that are important to you. 

 

Your top questions, answered

Over the past few weeks, we’ve spent a lot of time talking to hosts and collecting feedback on this new policy. We’ve addressed a few of the top questions below.

 

 

Why are you rolling out guest standards in phases? 

These new standards represent a significant change for the community (both hosts and guests), and we want to make sure they’re working as intended before we expand them. Rolling out the policy in phases lets us carefully experiment with the standards, education and warning systems, processes, and technology systems we’re using. We aim to gradually expand and refine the policy to address other challenges that are specific to certain groups of hosts as well as different property types. This will be a journey, and we appreciate your input along the way. 

 

What happens if I report an urgent safety incident while it’s occurring?

If you or your property is in danger, you should always contact local authorities first. We already have policies in place to handle severe safety issues, like assault and violent threats. Violators of these policies are, and will continue to be, subject to immediate removal from the platform. We’re also in the process of rolling out an Urgent Support Line that routes hosts directly to agents who are specifically trained to handle these kinds of calls. The goal is to ensure your call is handled quickly and consistently, so you feel supported every time. 

 

How will I be supported when I call in with an issue about a guest in one of these scenarios?

As part of the new policy, hosts can request penalty-free cancellations for the remaining nights in a reservation when a guest has violated these standards and the situation cannot be resolved. And as always, if there is any damage to your property as a result of one of the above scenarios, you can file a claim under our $1,000,000 USD Host Guarantee.   

 

Why aren’t you enforcing all of my House Rules?

Initially, the new Guest Standards Policy will focus on the House Rules that hosts have told us they care about most. We know there are lots of other scenarios that hosts include in their House Rules and listing details. And while these scenarios are important to you, they may not be relevant to all hosts (e.g. rules around whether shoes or certain types of food are allowed in the home). Although these more personal rules aren’t covered by our new Guest Standards Policy, you can help set the right expectations with clear communication—sometimes a respectful reminder can be enough to resolve an issue. 

 

Keep the feedback coming

You've been telling us we need more robust guest standards to make our community stronger. We expect that, over time, these changes will improve guest behavior and your experiences as a host. We’re pleased to take this critical step in our journey to improve safety and reliability for our hosts. There’s still a lot more work to be done, and we appreciate your ongoing input. 

 

The growth of our community, and the trust we’ve built, could not have happened without your partnership. Thank you for all you do, and please let us know if you have any feedback in the comments below. 

754 Replies 754

Hello ,

You are lucky and do you know why?! Because Airbnb at least removed those reviews. I live in Canada and here their policy is that the guest is right no matter what 😞 

All my bad reviews came from people who where in breach and when I complained to Airbnb their answer was that everybody has the right to their opinion good or bad as long that is not inflammatory or homophobic e.t.c.

My last review is realllly bad . Happened  that my guests booked for  2 and at the check in showed up 4 of them (after the second guest I charge more). I've talked with the lady who made the booking and she told me that I've should contact Airbnb instead (which I did). Well she gave me a review full with lies. Some of those I could prove (like location, accuracy of the listing and/or photos others I could not (like cleanness).   So the review stays. 

Before that a lady came with her dog (I don't allow pets). I said nothing to her and never complained to anyone about that. I guess she thought that I will so she gave a bad review. 

And another one who brought a guest with him and I confronted my guest about this issue. He put in his review between other things that I have mold in the bathroom...... All these reviews stays and cannot be removed........ 

I agree with you that we should  have more rights after all most of us share our home with guests and they should respect us and not take advantage as many of the guests do.

Many guests are nice and respectful but unfortunately many of them are not!! 

Rae18
Level 3
Huntington Beach, CA

I agree.  I have found little support from airbnb when I had a couple of bad guests in my own home that I rent out two rooms.   If a guest does not want to follow rules such as smoking or having a second party in my house when house rules clearly are spelled out, then they leave a bad review to be vindictive.   I actually had one guest break my vacuum because he was mad I vacuumed too early in the morning on the opposite side of the house at 9am when he was to check out at 10am.   Last summer I  had two bad guests and both level a one star review.   Airbnb took my superhost status away and even suspended one of my listings when I did NOTHING WRONG and have over a hundred good reviews.  This has definitely hurt my business.   One guest even called me a name in the review and went on to say that I might be on drugs.  Ridiculous!   Airbnb DID NOTHING TO HELP ME with untrue reviews and beyond that punished a good host that was a superhost.  When 99% guests say a home is clean and the host is great, airbnb should have a responsibility to remove reviews that are clearly lies.

Ariadna33
Level 1
Thalheim bei Wels, AT

Same here , lies lies lies and my super host title taken away

I love your idea of us hosts seeing how guests have rated previous hosts, I think this would cut down the "low raters".... 

Isn't there a browser plug-in that will do that?

 

Mark116
Level 10
Jersey City, NJ

This sounds good and seems grounded in common sense.  But, as with everything related to airbnb the devil is in the details and the execution.  So, we'll see. 

... and @Mark116 , commonsense is a well known super power that is uniquely owned by a select number, not all! Lol....

Or say, common sense is the least common sense. 

Well, there is the issue that 'common sense' cannot occur because sense is not common. Common sense is myth and only valued by the subjectively futile. In the most objective review common sense is about as real as comic book heros.  

Susan17
Level 10
Dublin, Ireland

How will I be supported when I call in with an issue about a guest in one of these scenarios?

As part of the new policy, hosts can request penalty-free cancellations for the remaining nights in a reservation when a guest has violated these standards and the situation cannot be resolved. 

 

Oh, how lovely. Host can request a penalty-free cancellation when the guests have done enough damage/caused enough trouble, that the host has no option but to throw them out. 

 

Would that be with or without a refund for the offending guests? 

 

.

@Susan17 

 

Yes, that's an interesting question. Will the guests be refunded for the unused nights after having been thrown out for housrule-violations.

 

Right now they are refunded, we have that in writing from airbnb.

 

 


@Ute42 wrote:
 Will the guests be refunded for the unused nights after having been thrown out for housrule-violations.

Of course they will. 
In other words,ZERO penalty for frustrating the contract while the host gets hit in the pocketbook.

 


 

I agree.  I first put it in my rules, that one who breaks the house rules, particularly about smoking and pets, would be required to leave without refund.  But it sounded rude to me.  I thought it was enough to repeat the house rules.  If they break them, I would call Airbnb to talk about it and complain. 

I actually had a guest who didn't flush the toilet, and brought a prostitute to my house.  When I complained to Airbnb they tried to get me to give him another chance.  I said No. They said they cannot force you to have a guest .  They told him to leave immediately, and they refunded him from me.  At the time, I didn't even care about the money.  Then I left him a review, where I said what happened.  He never looked at the review.  So did it go on his site or not?  I think maybe it did, after some time.

We are a no pets home and posted a $300 fine for bringing pets. I have a fur allergy and can"t be around any pet hair. We had a guest come and bring a dog which he never even asked about that we had pictures of running around the yard and going in and out of the house all days he stayed. When we contacted him he did not reply and when he left we asked for the $300 fine and he told us it was a service dog and he had epilepsy. When contacting Airbnb we were told we couldn't collect the fine or do anything about it because it was a service dog. We had to hire a cleaning company to come in and do a special cleaning so we could use it again. We would have been better not renting to the guest as we lost all our profit. There should be a requirement that pets are disclosed, service or not. Most pet friendly places charge extra for cleaning. Service dog or not guest should be required to talk to a host about the pet.


@Kristen198 wrote:

I agree.  I first put it in my rules, that one who breaks the house rules, particularly about smoking and pets, would be required to leave without refund.  But it sounded rude to me.  I thought it was enough to repeat the house rules.  If they break them, I would call Airbnb to talk about it and complain. 

I actually had a guest who didn't flush the toilet, and brought a prostitute to my house.  When I complained to Airbnb they tried to get me to give him another chance.  I said No. They said they cannot force you to have a guest .  They told him to leave immediately, and they refunded him from me.  At the time, I didn't even care about the money.  Then I left him a review, where I said what happened.  He never looked at the review.  So did it go on his site or not?  I think maybe it did, after some time.



@Kristen198 wrote:

I agree.  I first put it in my rules, that one who breaks the house rules, particularly about smoking and pets, would be required to leave without refund.  But it sounded rude to me.  I thought it was enough to repeat the house rules.  If they break them, I would call Airbnb to talk about it and complain. 

I actually had a guest who didn't flush the toilet, and brought a prostitute to my house.  When I complained to Airbnb they tried to get me to give him another chance.  I said No. They said they cannot force you to have a guest .  They told him to leave immediately, and they refunded him from me.  At the time, I didn't even care about the money.  Then I left him a review, where I said what happened.  He never looked at the review.  So did it go on his site or not?  I think maybe it did, after some time.


 

Airbnb is completely unsympathetic about guests not disclosing animal companions AND Airbnb even makes it nearly-impossible for Hosts to collect a 'pet-fee'.  The platform does not have the option of adding a pet fee -- yes, you can add a 'resort' fee, a 'linens' fee, other ridiculous fees for a regular homeowner ... and a 'cleaning' fee -- but no simple way of asking up-front for payment.  And it does take a lot of extra cleaning after an animal.  I've been told I need to send a 'request for money' - but the guest has the option of declining!  Again, Airbnb doesn't support the collection of that fee - even when my listing says that there IS a pet fee.

 

Sure, it is illegal to deny a guest based on their having a 'service animal' - and it is illegal to inquire 'why' they need the animal - but it is NOT illegal to require the disclosure of an animal prior to contracting.