Hi, my husband and I own a property several hours away from ...
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Hi, my husband and I own a property several hours away from where we live and we rent it on airbnb. We hired a local manager ...
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I was financially penalised and prevented from continuing my business for several days because of an exceptional error relating to a cancellation. Because we had an agreement with a guest to get his money back for cancelling the reservation and to avoid being heavily penalised by Airbnb, we ended up suffering the consequences of an unfair system that penalises both those who abuse it and cancel dozens of reservations a year and those who make a mistake and do it once a year or less with 10 apartments. How is it possible for Airbnb to be so inflexible and yet ask its hosts to be flexible? We have a great example: the creation of the non-refundable booking fee, which hosts have been asking for for so long, was only created 4 years ago, after 15 years of activity. But the reality is that even this comes with impositions from Airbnb: to be refundable, we have to give up 10% of our revenue? And don't even get me started on what they did to hosts during COVID-19...
Hello @Samuel-And-Chiara0
Did you cancel a reservation or did the guest? Airbnb tightened up their cancellation policy for hosts over a year ago now and yes it's a double penalty for us if we cancel - financial and our calendar is blocked for the dates cancelled.
You're right though, the onus is on us to be flexible even if we have a non refundable policy and it does seem odd that we should be put in this uncomfortable situation of feeling we have to accept the unacceptable.
Hello @Joelle43
First of all, we don't deny our mistake that led to the double booking, we agreed with the guest to cancel, first on the phone, and because they say today that words don't mean anything, in writing, so there were no more mistakes. So what do you think happened? When the guest contacted Airbnb, they saw our message asking him to cancel and that we would refund all his money, with our justification for what had happened.
Having seen that, we were told that they "had to" do it as if we had cancelled it on our end.
I was not able to exactly follow what happened to you, and of course it is easy for me to offer advice now that everything is already done.
Regardless of the reason, I am happy to know that you made an agreement with the guest and that they agreed to cancel the stay, but it should have been them who canceled, not you.
Let me share with you my practice.
Sometimes there are external reasons that require cancelling a stay. Here is what I do.
1. Never ever never ever never ever and again never ever press the cancellation button.
If there is any issue with the property and you cannot host, call Airbnb and explain. I know hosts who had problems with the roof after the major storm we had a few weeks ago, but they found creative ways to still accept the reservations they had.
If you are not available or your cleaner is on holiday, pay double or triple to someone if needed but keep your word and accept the guest.
2. Always always always always and again always if the guest wants to cancel even if you are giving them a full refund contact Airbnb support and explain the situation once, twice, and a third time if needed until they repeat your words exactly. The cancellation is by the guest, not by you.
Almost every time they say to me, "You called us asking to cancel the guest's stay."
I reply, a little impatiently, "NO. I do not want to cancel the reservation. The guest wants to cancel, and I approve. Please repeat it back to me so I know you understand."
Keep in mind that customer support follows protocols, and sometimes when they cannot find the correct one, they get lost in the communication. You must repeat it again and again. The cancellation is by the guest, not by you. Only when they repeat it correctly should you close the chat.
I see that you have a few listings. This is one of the benefits. If you cannot host the guest in one property, offer them an upgrade to another property of yours at no extra charge.
If I ever have a guest that I cannot accommodate, I will offer them to sleep in my own house if needed.
And most importantly, transparency. Explaining clearly why you cannot host and offering reasonable alternatives always helps to get the guest’s cooperation.
All the best,
Guy
P.S. @Joseph2571 , I thought you would find it interesting.
I would agree with you normally on this @Guy991 But if i understand @Samuel-And-Chiara0 correctly they made a double booking and therefore the onus shouldn't have been on the guest to cancel.
if you made a double booking as you indicated @Samuel-And-Chiara0
I don't understand why you asked the guest to cancel?
The double booking from another platform I presume.
in which case you should have cancelled paid the cancellation fee and accepted the other booking.
If you at any time suggest the guest cancel due to a mistake on your part (double booking), Airbnb sees that as "encouraging the guest to cancel" and you will be penalized for it.
Switch to Another Property
@Guy991 had a great suggestion in that if you are able to switch the guest to another property of yours at no extra cost, and the guest agrees,and you modify the reservation on Airbnb, that would be one way to handle it.
Modifying a Reservation as a Host
https://www.airbnb.com/help/article/50
Extenuating Circumstances
If you need to cancel and qualify for extenuating circumstances (storm damage, natural disaster, flooding, personal emergencies, etc.), you need to contact Airbnb and have them handle the cancellation so as not to be penalized.
Cancellations as a Host Extenuating Circumstances
https://www.airbnb.com/help/article/2022