We’ve noticed a lot of discussion lately about the update...
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We’ve noticed a lot of discussion lately about the updated Superhost criteria, so we wanted to explain why we made this up...
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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:
On web:
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 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.
there is no place to address requirement of a photo in the settings. not on a PC, and android, or an I phone.
Its called “Air BnB speak” and it’s disrespectful and a firm of discrimination in itself.
Anybody interested in setting up an online hospitality site based on mutual respect and trust? I’ll ditch airbnb in a flash and join a site that is safe for all parties. Photos and profiles required! Very unhappy about this move by airbnb and ready to ditch this site.
Agreed Barry in Auckland. I'm absolutely not willing to share my home with someone who can't even smile at me when they ask. If airbnb is willing to put all hosts at risk by showing our faces on our profile shots, and photos in and out of our homes, ask the same of the potential guests! I want to see what their home looks like, and how they keep it before letting them in mine. Or, conversely, I will show a photo of a daisy as my profile shot, and hand drawn pictures of the offered guest space. WHEN they pay in full, I will show them my real smile, and the real room they have just rented for the night.
I really do prefer to see a profile photo of a potential guest at the time they are booking even though as a Superhost for quite a few years I have never turned away guests who do not provide an accurate profile photo. Guests share our home and I like to have an idea what the guest looks like so that I have a rough idea of their age group (it helps to know a few things ahead of time) and can identify them at check in. I feel it is more honest. I understand Airbnb’s argument about discrimination but as a trusted, reliable and safe host I find it annoying to find that a guest’s profile photo is, in fact, a photo of an animal or a weird face. I provide my potential guests with a true, accurate profile photo of myself and believe it is respectful for them to do the same for me.
Faye [Surname hidden]
Wonthaggi
Australia
Here is the Airbnb instructions to hosts in the section where you are setting up your profile ( pics)
"Clear frontal face photos are an important way for hosts and guests to learn about each other. It’s not much fun to host a landscape! Be sure to use a photo that clearly shows your face and doesn’t include any personal or sensitive info you’d rather not have hosts or guests see."
I think many of us agree, but it now seems that Airbnb has decided to think differently.
...but only for the guest. Hosts are still required to comply @Christine0
Ive worked really hard and live what I do, as I’m sure you do too.
I live along the Pacific Coast Highway corridor in the US, which has become a popular drug running route.
Im not ok with risking my home and personal safety by being forced to accept anyone who wants to flop in my home with no confirmed ID, payment or photo just so Air BnB can make their $6/ booking off me, then refuse to back me up if there’s trouble.
If this matter isn’t fixed, I’m pulling my listing and going with another provider that will at least meet the industry standards for ID and payment methods before booking.
Let's unite on this and let each other know when the replacement to airbnb has been discovered. My safety is at risk hosting to faceless who knows, after giving them my smile, and my home details, inside and out.
Thanks for posting this Christine. A very good reminder of what Airbnb asks of us hosts.
They need to reverse this stupid decision of not releasing guest profile photos until after the booking is completed. I’ll have to give my membership of Airbnb a lot of thought.
Faye
After reading some of the posts by other hosts, I have to agree that I really don’t like this new policy. I like “knowing” who I’m cooresponding with thru Airbnb. If I’m putting pictures of myself and the inside of my home on the internet, the least my guests can do is identify themselves. The gray faceless profile pictures are scary and give the impression that either the guest doesn’t know how the system works or that they are hiding something. So, let’s all go back to being friends and show our faces to each other. Don’t assume the worst of every host by forcing this policy on us.
Thanks
Lets be fare in this business. We, as hosts, are showing our profile picture,therefore, our guests must do the same too. This is called equality.
What is happening to Airbnb?? Are we to open our homes to expose ourselves to a complete stranger who feels like mysteriously sliding into our space, with no picture, minimal profile if they choose, and no guest surname, to then share a bedroom in our home???The guest privacy protection is great for the guest, but its the host and hosts family who need to be protected also, ( which is quite different to general discrimination)and without comfortable airbnb hosts and a process that ensures protection for airbnb hosts, there would be less choice for guests in airbnb accommodation and less fees for airbnb.
I would also appreciate a guest surname when booking. There would be very few hotels, in the world where you can book with a first name only.This again would ensure some host protection and offer the host some reassurance with knowing who is staying and sharing the hosts home, with the host and their family.
To ensure host protection rather than Airbnbs fear of guests feeling potentially discriminated against, it would be more simple to provide enough guest information for hosts to make a decision upfront ie guest photo and surname,( as in hotels all over the world) without the host having to accept the booking to find out who is actually booking,and then disapointing the guest by cancelling their reservation, with the host then being penalised for the cancellation.
I'm out airbnb- thanks- it was nice while it lasted.I'm removing my listing. I don't feel secure and now feel very poorly represented by airbnb- neither do I feel my family is protected or safe with this system- I actually feel quite used and very disappointed.
@Ann---Andrew0 your concerns are very understandable. Sorry to hear that you feel Airbnb no longer provides the safety that you need.
Best regards. Christine
I should probably go to bed now! Just feel bad for the new Airbnb guests who don’t have any reviews, since I just changed my requirements that all guests have to have previous reviews. Since Airbnb isn’t going to let me see my potential guests, I will have to rely on my fellow hosts to provide me with peace of mind. Wonder what the company growth trajectory will look like when many hosts choose the same option?
Good night all!
How do you do this?
Go to listing, booking, guest requirements, select additional requirements and you will see the option there. If everyone did this l, then Airbnb would cease to attract new guests until they changed the policy.
Good luck!