Renter Screen for 6-month Stay

Jiawei8
Level 2
Los Angeles, CA

Renter Screen for 6-month Stay

Hi all.

 

I'm a new host to the community and am currently hosting the property for 1-month minimum stay.

 

I just received an inquiry for a 6-month stay, and I am overwhelmed because I had a smell of this might be a scam.

 

The user has 2 reviews and ID verified by Airbnb, but he/she approached without much context and directly wanted to book for a 6-month stay, which costs over $10k.

 

I am worried, and wanted to do a 3-rd party background check before accepting the client, but I guess this is against Airbnb's policies.

 

Should I accept the inquiry? What could potentially go wrong? Could the client be a Professional Tenant? Any thoughts?

 

Thanks!

6 Replies 6
Emiel1
Level 10
Leeuwarden, The Netherlands

@Jiawei8 

If you are a new host i would not recommend to start with  "long term stays".

Entering this words in the HELP section on Airbnb will bring up a lot of information you should read first, for example:

What-are-some-differences-between-longterm-hosting-and-shortterm-hosting

Also communicate with this guest more and ask the questions you want answers on.

 

You asked: "What could potentially go wrong" ? A lot, search this community !

Thank you so much for the reply and the information! 

However, hosting short term stays in LA will require permit from the government etc. which also complicates things. 

Lenore22
Level 10
California, United States

What if you agree to a 30-day stay (or less of you can do that), with an option to extend and take it from there?

Thank you for the advice!

You mean I can settle a 30-day stay with the guest first and decide whether to continue hosting the guest after the 30-day stay has ended?

This sounds like a better plan. I'm more comfortable of a 30-day stay than a 6-month one. 

Ann783
Level 10
New York, NY

Maybe investigate when legal occupancy begins in your area. In NYS, after 30 days they are legal tenants and cannot be removed without a court order

Same in LA. After 30 days, the tenant automatically gain legal rights, and this is why things get tricky.