***WE CANNOT PAY OUR RENT WITH BIG IDEAS: AN OPEN LETTER TO BRIAN CHESKY***

Answered!
Rose123
Level 10
New York, NY

***WE CANNOT PAY OUR RENT WITH BIG IDEAS: AN OPEN LETTER TO BRIAN CHESKY***

On March 14, 2020, Airbnb changed policy to allow guests full compensation for cancelled bookings as a result of the current COVID-19 health crisis. This policy overrides existing policies hosts have in place to protect their homes and livelihoods, placing the responsibility of an entire global health pandemic on their shoulders.

 

Brian, you say your hosts are “heroes”, but everyday heroism can take many forms, and among these is corporate social responsibility. You tweet that Airbnb is concocting “big ideas” to help hosts, but we cannot pay our mortgages, rent, staff and bills with big ideas.

 

The impact of your March 14 policy change will be rapid and far-reaching. The diverse individuals who comprise your host community will face the very real prospect of eviction. This impacts individuals who may not have another source of income. Or, they may have a hosting income, but are also active participants in creative industries. They are poets, painters, artists, writers, academics, musicians, dancers, ceramicists, bloggers and others who balance the economic precarity of creative work with hosting as a matter of necessity, not luxury. They are the same individuals who, reliant on a gig economy, do not have access to health insurance, nor the protection of employer benefits and sick leave.

 

Your guests have a refund at stake: your hosts, their homes and livelihoods. We ask you to protect hosts as well as guests. We urge you to reimburse hosts for cancelled reservations according to their cancellation policies. We as a host community do not believe that guests should be traveling in the current health crisis. We also do not think that hosts should suffer crippling losses. We ask you to acknowledge the loyalty – and the revenue – of the hosts who built you. And we ask you to consider how to best support your most precarious hosts, those who will soon be on the verge of eviction.

 

*** Airbnb hosts, feel free to copy, paste and share. Use the hashtag: helpyourhosts ***

Top Answer

I completely agree with this post! Here is the feedback I put on another conversation but will add here. 

 

I understand that this is a difficult time for everyone involved but putting 100% of the loss on owners versus some shared loss with vacationers was (is) wrong. Many of us have multiple properties and this is our business and income for our families. Allowing guests to cancel whenever they wish to over this period of time, even with strict cancellation plans that recommend supplemental insurance is unfair. I am now reading direct Airbnb responses where they are recommending travelers to opt out of getting their insurance money and instead taking the host money! Insanity. 
 
I knew we would take losses when this occurred. I have tried working with guests, asking if they plan to cancel, so I can relist and rebook what I can to help pay all the expenses but that blanket policy you put in place allows them to cancel whenever they want. This is our highest season. This month is the month that pays for the low season. I am looking at a significant loss. I am also reading on a super host community page where guests are checking into peoples home and then cancelling after staying!  That is so wrong. I called into today to check to see if that could happen. That people could take advantage of this to that level and the answer from the agent was that could happen. Someone could just check into our homes and cancel whenever you want for a refund. This is very concerning. 
 
I understand this is time that all of us are taking losses. I believe the fair and equitable action from Airbnb would have been a split loss for that month on strict non cancellable contracts so that owners could also still pay their bills while we shared the burden equally for this time period. I also believe that guests should have had to give owners cancellation notification with 7 days notice so we had the option to rebook . Thirdly, under no circumstances should a guest be allowed to check into a home and then just cancel while staying. That is not ethical. 
 
Thank you for your time, 
Christy Urban 
 
Woman owned small business
Urban Vacation Properties LLC

 

108 Replies 108

Thank you! I was too worried about backlash from selfish guests to make a petition, but have been thinking about it for days. I just signed and I'm glad that someone else took the stand. Let's all share the task of holding Airbnb to account. In the meantime,  I just published this article on Medium. Please share to support hosts working in the creative arts. https://medium.com/@vickers.rose/we-cant-pay-our-rent-in-bold-ideas-943fb4c68602

Thomas977
Level 10
Tønsberg, Norway


@Thomas977 wrote:

https://eu.usatoday.com/story/travel/hotels/2020/03/16/coronavirus-airbnb-refunds-sore-spot-hosts-lo...


 

It's people exactly like this ..."William Fuller, owner of Summit County Mountain Retreats, a midsize property management company"  that is what's wrong with airbnb. Airbnb wasn't created to make people wealthy by being able to list 100's of units for rent in a single area. It was created for regular folks who wanted to share their own space with a stranger and make a few extra bucks doing so. The william fullers of the world HURT the small hosts like us by flooding the market which drops the prices low. 

 

If someone like william fuller has got themselves in over their head by counting on the good thing that airbnb has become, to pay his 100 employees and all his bills, then he's doing it wrong. Airbnb is not about that.

 

It's only one month folks. From 3/20 to 4/20. COuld that change? Possibly. BUt you're going nuts over having to give refunds for a true extenuating circumstance for 30 days. If that will make you homeless or lose your 100 unit STR business, then you're doing airbnb wrong. 

"Airbnb wasn't created to make people wealthy by being able to list 100's of units for rent in a single area" "Airbnb is not about that"

 

Lol! You're kidding, right..?? Why else do you think Airbnb accepted $4.4 billion in funding from venture capitalists, property magnates, developers, real estate tycoons, speculators and vulture funds, have had a separate department aggressively recruiting, promoting and pandering to exactly this type of "host" (and much, much bigger) for at least 6 years now, and openly favour the mega-host with a raft of preferential policies and practices that are denied to "regular folk who want to share their space with strangers"? 

 

There are "hosts" on the Airbnb platform with 10,000+ places each. Do you think they all just snuck in under the radar when Airbnb was looking the other way, or something? Pull your head out of the sand, man! 

Airbnb will learn it the hard way like Uber

We should all switch to another company

I think we will!  @Luca1817   I just published this article on Medium. Please share to support hosts working in the creative arts who have been adversely affected by Airbnb’s recent policy change. Please share it with your guests, friends, and on your social with the hashtag #helpyourhosts https://medium.com/@vickers.rose/we-cant-pay-our-rent-in-bold-ideas-943fb4c68602

Donald28
Level 10
Lithia Springs, GA

You guys are all crazy. The virus is the epitome of an "extenuating circumstance" (an unexpected circumstance that’s out of your control) that should allow a guest out of their booking and receive a full refund. Yeah, it sucks for us because it is one HUGE extenuating circumstance that could and probably will affect ALL of our bookings for a month (until 4/20/2020)... not just one or two every year.  We all agreed to the extenuating circumstance policy when we started airbnb. 

@Donald28 I am getting cancelations for as far out as August. Summer camps and summer programs/events are being canceled due to the virus. I am not getting a dime from these reservations but because it is outside of the extenuating circumstances timeframe, Airbnb is still collecting all their service fees. By the looks of it, Maine is not going to have much of a tourist season. It is going to be really hard for a lot of people here.

According to what airbnb wrote on its own website, this should only affect reservations from 3/14 to 4/20....

 

"This policy now applies to existing reservations for stays and Airbnb Experiences made on or before March 14, 2020, with check-in dates between March 14, 2020 and April 14, 2020."

 

https://news.airbnb.com/extenuating-circumstances-policy-activated-around-the-world/

 

All the cancellation policies offer a full refund to the guests if they cancel a month or more before their reservation. We all already agreed to refund guests if they cancel a month in advance. 

You should get part of the cancellation. Check your cancellation policy. If its outside of their time frame you could fight this with them. On the other side. lower your prices. People is cancelling with the original hosts just to find a cheaper one.. 

Stephanie
Community Manager
Community Manager
London, United Kingdom

Hiya everyone,

 

Thank you for all of your comments regarding this recent policy update. I just wanted to share the recent Airbnb update: A message from our founders 

 

We will continue to collect your volumes of feedback in the next phases of this ongoing global issue. 

 

Thanks,

 

Stephanie

-----

 

Please follow the Community Guidelines 

Thomas977
Level 10
Tønsberg, Norway

WOW, this guy is an idiot. He is what's wrong with airbnb today. He's got 100+ units and has tried to make a business out of airbnb. It was never intended for that. It was intended for the people with 1 or 2 rentals to make some supplemental income! Idiots like this who manipulate the system are the problem with airbnb. 

Thomas977
Level 10
Tønsberg, Norway

Please sign petition http://chng.it/Sj9nRW7VDn (AirBNB's UNFAIR treatment of HOSTS amid COVID-19)

no