When you welcome guests to stay in your space, it’s e...
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When you welcome guests to stay in your space, it’s essential that they respect your home, follow your house rules, co...
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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:
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.
I just had a guests who were so drunk and disorderly, security guards repeatedly tried to remove them from the pool and grounds . I called Airbnb to let them know that I was asking them to leave and a "case manager" asked me to give them another chance. They had already had several chances and I was worried about damage to my apartment not to mention, totally disrupt the other residents on the building. Small children were scared to be in the pool with them. He wanted me to take photos and videos. Seriously?
The case manager assured me that I was insured with Airbnb. I laughed so hard! I had a guest destroy a granite table--left it shattered in pieces and had to fight to get reimbursed. It took weeks of filling out forms and having frustrating conversations. That guest was from Argentina, I am in Canada and the condo is in Mexico. And I, like others commenting here, got my first bad review.
Back to the story: I told the case manager that I don't have a month to fight with them and get everything replaced. Plus I have other rentals immediately. It is high season in Mexico. In the end our Security guards called the police on the drunk guests after I was unsuccessful in my attempts to get them to leave. Five Federalis in full tactical gear and balaclavas with machine guns drawn, cleared the apartment, and went looking for them on the property (as they were hiding) and escorted them out. The guest wants her money back because she didn't break any rules and only had "one beer." Airbnb is reviewing it. So messed up.
Copy this guy on everything. He’s an exec in customer service. aisling.hassell@airbnb.com
Hello,
My listing is in France and I used to rent out rooms individually and one time I had to call the police as a guest was being offensive towards my other guests and refused to share the shared bathroom. The police told me that even though the guest had attacked me she was claiming that I had attacked her (even though the other guests were witnesses), the police said it was her word against mine and therefore the guest hadn't done anything wrong and since the guest had a contract indicating she had the right to stay for another 2 days, there was nothing I could do to get her out, if I wanted her out I would have to take her to civil court and get an eviction notice. I was unable to rent out the other two rooms on that floor and lost out on a lot of money. But I am worried that Airbnb can't do anything more than the police about removing an unwanted guest. I have also had on many occasions more guests than they had paid for, but again there is no way of proving this, now I have to lock up the extra folding beds. Guests often walk off with the bath towels and then claim that they had left the towel in the shared bathroom and it was some other guest that took it. I have even had guests walk off with duck down quilts, and again no way to prove that it was the guest, since they leave the door unlocked after they leave at the crack of dawn. I have had to stop renting rooms individually and now only rent my villa as a whole, but this means I rent out less frequently and now lose out on a lot of money. As for parking in the garden, it's marked in my contract that they can't but it doesn't matter how often I tell guests they can't, they do, the same goes for playing football in the tiny garden, roses get broken and the garden left with no grass, but how do you charge a guest for damaged bushes and lawn, the same goes for animals, I don't allow animals but again, how do you prove it without seeing it for yourself. I have had to add this clause to my contract too, 8 years ago my contract was a page long, now it is 4 pages long. I don't feel protected by airbnb at all. When a guest leaves with the keys I have to change the locks each time. One time a large group rented the villa and there was extensive damage (1700EUR worth), but the guest who booked was not there at departure and the guest that did the checkout for the group refused to sign anything; airbnb told me that the signatory guest did not acknowledge any damage apart from a few broken glasses, so that was all I was refunded (24EUR).
Airbnb is never there to protect the host. I feel alone and helpless, even the police don't help. I am scared that bad guests are just one step away from squatting...
It is a good idea to check a few other ids if you are uncomfortable.Just let the original signatory know that you will be doing so for your safety and theirs. We have a right to know who is in our home.
I agree, airbnb are not dealing with serious problems and really let's be honest how are they going to enforce any of their policies, even if we as a host report that the guest has parked on the lawn, or turned up with more people, had a dog or had a party, how do we prove it and how are we compensated. But that is the least of our worries, how do we get a bad guest or violent guest out, since the police refuse to get involved and say 'take it to civil court', the worst airbnb can do is suspend the bad guest's account, which is no big deal, the guest can just create another account. But when do we get compensated for the whole lock that has to be replaced when a guest leaves with the keys. The guest simply has to say that it is not true and that's that, and airbnb's go-to phrase is 'there is no appealing our decision, our decision is final', which always seems to be in favour of the guest...
Just keep appealing and insisting that their manager review it. Usually after 7 to 8 escalation requests it gets to someone who will fix the issue, reimburse you, pay you all of what you are owed. Also, after you’ve been stonewalled, just copy aisling.hassell@airbnb.com on all the email communications. He is an executive and will get someone competent to look at the situation. I believe that Air BnB’s policy of not paying for damage that they are supposed to pay for is fraud—they offer 1M of guaranteed protection but they don’t intend to pay out and they make it very hard—and eventually there will be a class action against them. There are so many hosts with the same story.
Use a digital lock from now on, and change the combo. It’s your property. You don’t need to go to civil court to remove a trespassing guest. You can have their car towed. As soon as you change your mind, a guest has to leave according to nearly all state laws (talk to a local attorney, but I practice law in TN). You can shut off the power and water. Show up with a bouncer and kick them out. Call the police to report them as trespassers and file a report. Tell them you want them to “keep the peace” and watch as you remove the guests. We are holding all the cards here people! These are our properties. We need to get some publicity so that guests understand that they need to behave—Air BnB shouldn’t be a shield for bad guest behavior.
Hi Margo12,
so sorry to hear this. But once you cancel the reservation, there is no agreement between you and a guest and they have no right to be on your property. So you can explain this to guest and before calling the police, you should make them understand this and ask the guest to sort it with airbnb.
furthermore, in these circumstances, its not your fault so airbnb should have payout the full amount for the whole reservation.
as well forwarding the messages from other guests in the property would make your point strong.
i have these issues at least once a week
and i always resolve them exactly how i told you, never the problem.
well good luck with everything, hope it helps.
mo
You don’t even have to cancel the reservation. You can tell the police they violated the rules and they are no longer welcome. Guest permission can be revoked at any time for any reason or for no reason and then they are trespassers. The guest could then possibly have a breach of contract claim that they can file if they want. But property rights give the owner possession when a guest refuses to behave. Absent someone’s landlord/tenant lease, if you show ownership (the Deed), you cannot be kicked out of your own house.
Interesting... when calling the police in the future tell them that this is a short-term stay under 30 nights and would not fall under typical rental laws... tell him to treat this more like a hotel eviction. Let him know that you have not conveyed exclusive possessory interest in the real estate to a tenant, this is non-exclusive interest and for a fixed period of time.
Yes, Airbnb just gives a bunch of lip service and that's about it . They make is harder than hell to use their host guarantee, so that you just get fed up and go away. They don't seem to care what these guests do to your property.
I love you!
yes I've had so many wonderful guests and made many long term friendships, but there have been 3 truely horrifying guests. In the early days Airbnb was so onboard and the staff new how to handle things, as well as having the right attitude to make me one safe and supported. But the last 2 incidents I have had to deal with staff who have no idea what to do and how to handle a situation, or how to reassure me.
I haven't had my place listed for over a year now because of a terribly traumatic situation I had with a frightful guest. It was very badly handled by the help line people, who were no help at all. I was continually harassed by this woman for months even after she was well and truely gone.
Airbnb needs to drop any notion that Police will help. They have no resources to do so and no comprehension of the issues.
This is scary and makes one afraid to host Airbnb travelers