So what do I do now?
Latest reply
So what do I do now?
Latest reply
I thought I'd post on a new resolution request I'm making as a sort of tracking/informational post for fellow hosts. I often let guests that try to sneak an extra guest or two over our maximum through as long as they are good guests and don't do a lot of damage. This past weekend though I had a guest with ~16-20 people in our 10 person max home for a 2 night stay. This is only the 3rd time in my 8+ years of hosting ~170 guest groups that I've requested money for extra guests. I took a similar strategy on the previous cases as well and was successful in recovering as much as $600 (1 group caused damages/losses and smoked.)
I was traveling during this guests' stay so I didn't get a chance to check the outdoor cameras (driveway and ring door cam) until after my cleaning lady informed me on checkout that she saw three cars leaving the property 30 minutes after check-out time. 1 car had 6 people and the other two cars each had 4 people in them. I reviewed the camera video footage and before those 3 cars left after check-out 2 other cars had left earlier with at least 4 people had in them.
Based on the videos I really could only "definitely" demonstrate 16 people leaving on check-out so I made the following request for additional money: "At least 16 guests stayed in the home for 2 nights. Our extra guests fees for beyond 8 guests is $28 per night per guests to cover the extra use of supplies and longer cleaning times for large groups. That original reservation fees for 10 guests covered the extra guest fees for guests 9 and 10. I am reducing my regular extra guest per night fee to $25 per extra guests 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16 per night for a total of $300 total requested to cover the at least 16 guests that stayed at the home."
Keep in mind that the guest instant booked which meant they agreed to a maximum of 10 guests on booking. I also follow-up with a personal message in messaging after instant books to reconfirm guests are ok with the no parties, no smoking, and no pets rules and will abide by the 10 person max limit. If they don't reply I'm rather insistent and follow-up with a text message to their provided phone number asking for confirmation with a warning that otherwise I'll need to cancel the request within 24 hours. That follow-up usually scares away guests trying to break the rules and they cancel quickly without replying. This guest replied, agreed to the rules, and confirmed "no more than 10" people in writing in the AirBNB app.
Overall their stay went ok. They had some trouble figuring out the sound system and the handles in the master shower which does cause guests some confusion at times. They also set off the smoke alarm once while cooking breakfast the first morning. Not the easiest guests in the world, but not the worst either. They were fairly amicable and appreciative of my quick replies to them.
In guests' initial booking message guests said their family was in-town to see their grandmother. The videos did NOT look like a family get together. It looked like a small party/get together among a variety of friends. They didn't trash the house but used every linen and all the extra linens as well leading to my cleaning lady spending 8 hours at the house instead of her customary ~5 hours. They also necessitated an extra run to the municipal dump to get rid of all the trash.
I'm out ~$300 right now if I don't count the extra costs of needing to replenish supplies and not to mention a fairly annoyed house keeper. Please note I'll be giving the house keeper 90% of that $300 as extra payment whether I get it through the resolution center or not.
This seems like a pretty cut-and-dried case where I should win the resolution request and may even be able to get the guest banned for partying if they annoy me in the resolution process. Based on my reading of the posts here, if the guests doesn't accept my request it will be up to the luck of the draw with who picks up the AirCover support ticket. I haven't heard back on the resolution request yet from the guest but it's only been about 18 hours. Also note I clearly disclose all cameras on the property and that 3 internal cameras are turned off and toward the wall during the guests' stay and only the cameras facing the driveway and front porch are remained on during the stay to verify guests follow the house rules.
I plan on reviewing the guest as a 1 for house rules, 3 for communication and 3 for cleanliness. My review of the guest will state "I would not rent to the guest again due to violating our house maximum occupancy rules." I'm waiting to submit my review for the guest. The guests did not submit their review before I submitted my resolution request but the guest did say on check-out before I submitted the resolution request that they "loved their stay and thanks for everything!"
I will keep people posted as it all plays out.
Mike
Good luck!
Well, I am very interested in how this will unfold. My experience is that if I request money from the guest before they reviewed me they will bad star me. Choosing proper English and then slam the host with a one star rating.
Am really interested what's going to happen....
yes, this is why i let extra guests slide. unless i'm going to charge $300 for it, but otherwise if it's just an extra person or pet fee ($40~$100) I don't think it's worth the poor review i'm bound to get as retaliation.
In this case since technically they threw a party I have a feeling I may be able to do something about a revenge review. In the past I’ve followed a similar script of being completely non emotional with the guests and focusing on verifiable facts. I actually have gotten good reviews still out of the last guest I went through this with. The guest before that took a group photo on the front yard right in front of the camera with their 21 person group!
@Michael5689 interested to see how this pans out.
Over the last 6 years I’ve only pursued this once. 4 years ago.
My housekeeper went in and found the master bedroom mattress absolutely sodden in pee. It was a drunk adult male.
Fast forwarding a long story but I was reimbursed the cost of a new mattress, bedding and an extra 4 unregistered guests at £25 per guest per night with no argument.
Ew...pee. I had a bad throw-up + bleach incident. Amazingly I didn't get reimburse more than $200 for that one. That's the event that actually got me back onto the community center after being off for a few years.
The last time I went through this was early in the pandemic the summer of 2020 so I'm curious to see how/if the process has changed much since then with an obvious violation. I didn't upload the videos yet to the request and didn't even mention them in the request. Not sure how the "no party" aspect will play into the process either.
The guests clearly saw the cleaning lady in the driveway while they were leaving. I'm expecting the guest to claim they only had 14 people in the house since that's how many were leaving when my cleaning lady was in the driveway. At that point I'll need to bring up the guests that left earlier in the morning and may be forced to bring out the videos.
Mike
@Michael5689 wrote:Ew...pee. I had a bad throw-up + bleach incident. Amazingly I didn't get reimburse more than $200 for that one. That's the event that actually got me back onto the community center after being off for a few years.
yes i've had a vomit situation and luckily i was able to get the (red wine) vomit out of the linens but it still added another 2 hours to our total clean up (using ozone machine) and we found vomit inside the bathroom cabinet 2 days later... I charged them $125 cleaning fee and they paid it, and left me a short but nice review.
I don't fault guests for throwing up actually. It's a vacation home so it's going to happen sometimes just like minor stains on the carpet. I generally don't ding guests for that unless associated with a lot of other partying, garbage generation, etc...but breaking out bleach to try and clean up the throw-up?! Grrrr...
Please keep us posed on this one!
Hi @Michael5689
Have you got any updates on this yet?
I'd be really interested to hear about the outcome.
Jenny
@Jenny The guest hasn't acknowledged or replied to the request yet. I also have not reached out to the guest independently. They were slow to respond initially after making the booking so them not checking their AirBNB much is a possibility. The 72 hour clock on the resolution request will expire in ~12 hours so the big open question will be how things proceed after that.
@Jenn8 No response from the guest. I elected to call the Superhost support line using one of the local air code numbers instead of moving onto the next step through the app. I'm happy I did that. I connected with Joseph who helped out and was professional and helpful and open up the support message for me to provide screenshot justifications informed me I had 48 hours to provide them and that he would reach out to the guest who would have 24 hours to reply. The screenshot justification may only be needed if the guest denies the extra guests in the home. He said the text messages from the cleaning lady stating what she saw would be useful as well. Will probably take a few hours to put all the screenshots together. Catching 16+ different people on video checking in and out at different times requires a decent amount of work.
I had a guest that was trying to get a refund on his stay claiming issues at the end of his 2 months that he never once notified us or Airbnb about. I made sure to call Airbnb customer service the night of the issue so they had a heads up and would not approve his claim without my approval. He got very irate but Airbnb honored us as the host rather than the guest. I do think as hosts, I've noticed you get a better support from Airbnb if you take the time to call them rather than using emails or their resolution center. Many times requesting money from the guest isn't even available for me. I did have to wait for about 20 minutes on hold before I got to talk to someone but they backed us 100%. You might try that if the guest doesn't respond