@Inna22Your comments are funny. Obviously you did not read my listings before you suggested "putting more info the listing." Take a look! It is all there, in spades. If I put "more" in there, I'd be offered a book publishing deal LOL. All the info has been there since day one. People do not read. A lot of people do not read. The state of literacy around here is seriously deplorable. I cannot begin to tell you how many people state -- in words, not just checking a box, that they read and agreed to our House Rules, only to find that they never read them at all. Like -- as one VERY frequent example - they state that, again in specific words, and then they book, sometimes instant book, with young children when the very first House Rule on the list prohibits that. I could give you a zillion examples. It's huge. Mind blowingly huge. It's either illiteracy or lying. But it's hugely prevalent.
This problem really started with the pandemic. Before that, virtually all our guests were tourists, coming from all over the world to see New York City, and staying in Brooklyn due to better prices and more space than Manhattan options. Other than the occasional bad apple, almost everyone was just fine. Currently, obviously, there is no tourism. Borders are closed. To be honest, I feel that anyone doing domestic travel for the goal of "seeing NYC" at this time is missing a screw upstairs. We can't afford to just shut down the bnb -- but really, why would someone think they can "experience NYC" when everything, or almost everything, is shut down? Not very smart. So, these not very smart people are coming and they can't read. That's one category.
By far, the biggest category of guests coming to book during the pandemic are people who grew up in this neighborhood and are coming in to visit their family. Which translates to party. Their family obviously doesn't want them partying at their house, so they think they can just do it in a bnb. Wrong. Sadly, this neighborhood, up until about 15 years ago was severely underprivileged. Depending on the decade that someone grew up here, they might be very very smart, or they might be illiterate. I'm serious. I know my neighbors -- and I love them dearly -- we have a fabulous community. But depending on their age group, they are either acutely astute about all things in the world or they are illiterate. The group of latter is shockingly large and seems to be mostly people who are now like 28-45. People who are younger or older must have had great teachers back in elementary school. Not so for that group -- very sad. When neighbors who I personally know want to book, I know I won't have a problem, regardless of that. But most bookings are from people I don't know. Brooklyn is huge, bigger than you think. Airbnb hides the ages so I can't even make an educated guess. If people say they read the rules and agree with them, I have to accept that. But OMG -- like "hello, please don't mix your wet leftover food with the recycling because it's not cool when I have to clean it up -- ya know, like in the house rules you agreed to before booking." The answer is ALWAYS "Oh, I didn't know." It's maddening. The number of types of repeated examples is as long as our list of House Rules. "Please stop smoking immediately. We have an ashtray outside. You know we don't permit smoking inside the house." -- "Oh, I didn't know." GMAB.
NYC is a tough market during the current pandemic. Very tough.
Yes, this screening algorithm surely is (gratefully) preventing a lot of party people from booking, but they are missing so very many of them. Anyway, the purpose of this thread was simply to complain about the poor communication from Airbnb to the guests who get blocked -- and most importantly about the Airbnb system error of blocking them after instead of before they start the requests for booking.
It's not easy.