I had a guest instant book for a checkin today. We have a st...
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I had a guest instant book for a checkin today. We have a strict 4pm checkin time & they showed up at 2:15 saying they chose ...
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Hi all - I’m looking for some feedback as a new host.
Long story short: My wife and I recently listed our newly remodeled guesthouse on Airbnb. We had a bad experience with our first guests and have since pulled the listing.
Our guesthouse is 1 bedroom, 1-bath, 900 sq ft and was torn down to the studs for the remodel. The design is very modern and it’s full of amenities - too many to list. All our friends say the place is gorgeous. The neighborhood is also in my opinion one of the best in our city (Phoenix, AZ USA). I truly believe we have a great space. The house does have a 1-queen bed in the bedroom and a queen sleeper sectional. It can sleep 4 adults, but we thought we’d get single travelers, couples, or couples with one child.
Anyway, we were excited to rent and got 3 bookings right away. I think the introductory 20% off promo helped a lot. I personally have no reviews on this service. I have used other services and hotels for personal travels in the past so I’m admittedly new to this community. I knew it would be a process to build a reputation.
Our first guests reserved for two 20-something girls. The guest who booked said she was local, had a friend coming in from out of town, and wanted a place to hang out away from her roommate. So I’m thinking they want a girls’ weekend getaway. Fine by me.
Being new to this community with a new listing and knowing I have to build a reputation, I tried being a good host and left the girls a Thank You card thanking them for being our first guests, telling them to enjoy their stay, and I left them a nice bottle of local wine.
However, this was just a bad experience:
My wife and I were really unhappy with this whole experience. I tightened up House Rules and told my other two reservations about the updated rules. I also said they are free to cancel without penalty if the house no longer met their expectations. Both ended canceling. I must have overreacted and made overly strict house rules, but I felt like it was necessary.
We have since pulled the listing and found a traveling nurse month to month renter. I felt much more comfortable because i was able to do a background check, credit report, and even a FaceTime chat to give a tour of the space before offering a lease. I also like renting to a working professional with a good job.
So, my question for the community is what can we do differently if we return as hosts? I imagine we will consider re-listing between nurse bookings. Any suggestions on how to set firm rules without coming across as too strict? The things that bothered us most were the extra guests on our property without our knowledge. We felt 5-6 people in there was close to party, and we clearly listed no parties. The extra cleaning of the towels and linens was also much more work than we anticipated. The smoking and parking were also very irritating to us. We felt like we lost control of our own house.
I know people have had great experiences and success as hosts, so we’re not quite ready to give-up completely, but after our initial experience, we were clearly unprepared. What can we do better next time?
Don't rent to locals. There are a number of posts on this forum relating to issues with them.
Ask for a list of paying guests. State in your rules that there are to be no visitors without your permission due to your insurance policy, and AirBnB rules. As soon as you seee4 any visitors, send a charge to the booking person.
Hi Michael: As has been said already, don’t rent to locals! I made that same mistake with my first guest and I regretted it as well. A story for another time. And it was also already suggested, get the first and last names of all adults in the group if the reservation is for more than one of course. It’s even better if they all have Airbnb profiles then they can link into the reservation and you can get a better idea of them. Unfortunately that doesn’t happen often enough. As far as your house rules go, look at other listings in your area that are similar, and look at their house rules. It will give you better idea of what’s necessary for the demographic that your area attracts. Also search the community center forums for House rules suggestions. And then make it very clear things like no smoking property, or only smoking in certain areas and please do not dispose of your butts inside. You may also want to add to that no electronic cigarettes or Vaping implements. Some people say the smell will linger in the home others say it will not. It’s your call of course. I would encourage you to not let one bad experience spoil it for you. I get where you’re coming from but with help from the community center and other host forums that exist, you can get a lot of support and have a very generally pleasant time. There’s a great deal of knowledge available for you. Good luck!
I have two properties. One is a long term rental. Background check, $5k deposit, professional renters. Been doing it for 5 years. No problems.
Other is MIL Airbnb unit. More profitable than 2 bed rental, but constant churn, much higher risk, much lower quality guest. Smoking, garbage, people coming and going who may or may not be guests. As soon as you saw extra people etc you should have shut them down. The ongoing struggle is between risk and retaliatory reviews from the small number of guests you will need to ask to leave.
Unless you really need the money I would stick with long term rental 🙂
Hello Michael: We usually ask more questions about the guest and their group prior to accepting their reservations. If the person does not tell us anything about themselves or their group or the reason for their stay we will not accept their reservation. Also as others have stated to not rent to locals.
You can also add to your house rules that if there is any smoking there will be a $200 per day fee so that it deters them from breaking the rules. We too have a separate guesthouse on our property and because we live in the main house our house rules for the guest are more strict.
Your long, detailed account is a good example of how a host is confronted with the hour by hour management of guests when the rules and expectations are not clearly spelled out and implemented from the beginning. Now that you have realized that and have made adjustments, you probably would enjoy the short term rental experience. Probably the best way for you to go is to limit the number of guests to 2 - single or couple for a while. Later you can add an extra guest fee for guests 3 and 4. Baby steps.
As hosts we all have a learning curve and our guests are the best teachers. Bottom line, guests are often clueless and sometimes down right destructive. Your ability to vet guests will be key and will improve over time. BTW, if you haven't already done so, have a visual definition of the guest parking.
Hi@Micheal
Its rotten what’s happened to you.
Try and see if you can get some sort of recompense from air bnb.
Phone up your local air bnb number and explain the situation, take photos etc, have receipts for estimates, or invoices for repairs done.
Get in touch with your insurance company too.
Give these entitled guests a 1* all round where applicable.
Write a short honest factual review and a thumbs down.
None of the wishy washy vague review, that tells other hosts absolutely nothing about the guests.
Its this sort of vague review that allows these awful horrible entitled guests to bounce through air bnb from one unsuspecting host to another which is really not on!
OK, so you've had your fingers badly burnt with this experience and it’s rotten.
If you do decide to host again on air bnb please please have cast iron house rules/ house manual( look at mine)
All future guest bookings must have government ID vetted through air bnb.
All future guests bookings must have prior reviews
All future guest bookings must state identity if who is in the group of guests.
All future guest bookings must state reason for the trip to your area.
Dont accept third party bookings.
HAVE a security deposit.
Good luck to you.
well, first off, I rent to locals all the time and I have never had a problem. I know others have had trouble but so far it's been great for us. Mostly parents looking for a romantic getaway from the kids for a night or somebody with friends/family from out of town. Not sure why locals would cause more of a problem unless it's teenagers looking for a place to party but our space is not ideal for this since it's an attached guest house that only sleeps 2 people and we are always home at night so we know everything that is going on. We also had locals stay while their place was being painted and another stayed while their home was tented for fumigation. There are lots of reasons locals might want to book an airbnb.
As for these guests, it does seem like they took advantage of the fact that you don't charge for extra guests ans they were inconsiderate with the parking. I'm willing to bet the 50 something man was one of their dads, but who knows. The girls were looking for a place ot hang out, smoke, drink, etc. But they didn't damage anything (other then the light which was probably just an accident) and they seemed willing to pay for damages with is rare. btw, make up on towels and blood on the sheets is very common and really just the cost of doing business. I think you handled it fine and you can adjust your rules to help prevent this if you ever decide to try airbnb again. But it sounds like you have a good tenant now so perhaps that is the better way to go.
Hi@ Ned and Laura
I provide a sachet of hypoallergenic, fragrance free make up removal wipes, a tube of 100% cotton make up removal pads, tampons and sanitary towels along with the other toiletries in the guest, welcome basket.
So far no make up on white towels or bloodstained sheets.
The couple of £ pounds sterling this costs, is minimal to the cost of heavily stained towels and sheets.....just a suggestion.
I haven't had too much of a problem either once I put a stack of cheap wash cloths by the sink. I don't use disposable ones because our toilet goes into a sump pump and I don't want them to get flushed and clop the pump. But I got a pack of 10 wash cloths for like $4 and leave 3 or 4 nicely folded next to the sink. Since then no make up on the towels. Blood on the sheets however...well accidents happen not matter what you do.
Hi@Ned and Laura
I forgot to add that I have bin on the bathroom and a bin in the bedroom.
So far no wipes etc blocking the toilet....fingers crossed this continues.
Sanitary towels and tampons are in my guest welcome toiletries box, along with disposal bags for such sanitary items.
Then all hail to the mattress protector!
Please feel free to message me. My wife and I have been doing Airbnb in Phoenix for two years. Sounds like you got an ASU group of sority sisters or U of A. We have seen it all and I can worn you about everything. I can fill you in on everything you can excpect and more. We have our listening snoozed right now for a break.
Cam and Shannon
Hi
If you return as a host please write a factual review for other hosts to stop this Troy of bad guest proliferating through the air bnb platform to various unsuspecting hosts.
Fellow host......I’ve just had the guest I would NOT want to host again and they got a 5* star, review so WHAT THE HECK, is going on?
Other host.......Oh it couldn’t be that bad, just chalk it down to experience as it WILL make YOU a better host. I suggest that you don’t cane this guest, just write “best suited to a hotel” as EVERYONE surely knows, what this guest did in your family home.
Fellow host.......but that’s so vague, how’s that going to help this guest bouncing around air bnb from unsuspecting host to host?
Other host.........it’s ONLY a review, for goodness sake! It soon gets buried anyway, but most important of all, I DONT want to risk my STATS!
Sound familiar?
Thank you all for the support, insights, and great feedback!
It’s been a lot to digest and discuss with my wife.
Brief initial reaction:
- Will definitely tighten up future house rules! I naively thought checking the No Smoking and No Parties boxes would be sufficient and respected. I like idea of additional fines for violations. I know if I were looking at renting such a place and saw the potential fine for such behavior, I’d have no problem with it. Hopefully it would help weed out the irresponsible guests and attract the more conscientious ones.
- Great suggestion on limiting to 2 guests initially until our skill and comfort level improves. Will also plan on limiting to only registered guests on premises for insurance purposes as well. Wonderful suggestion. Thank you!
- Will clearly limit to 1 parking space for guests in the future, even though I already had the guest parking space described and clearly pictured in my check-in instructions.
- My wife and I were wondering if we were overreacting to some of the antics. Despite the late night comings and goings. We honestly heard none of it, so I have to give them some credit there. Our guesthouse is a separate unit from the main house, so we did market it as having much privacy. Good to hear the perspective on what we consider excessive stains being the cost of doing business. We were both just so confused about the make up stains since we clearly left a large stack of make up removal pads. We naively thought we were earning extra points for being considerate and that the gesture would be appreciated, which it clearly was not. It’s a good lesson for us to set more realistic expectations as well as to have clear and firm rules.
- I do give the guest credit for being willing to work with us and for paying the extra cleaning fee and for the replacement light. It doesn’t make up for the extra guests, smoking, or inconsiderate parking, but it’s something.
- @Cam-And-Shannon0, you hit the nail on the head! Impressive. ASU girls based on attire I saw them wearing. Would love to pick your brain! Thanks for the offer and I’ll me messaging you soon.
I’m sure it’s discussed elsewhere, but is there a prevailing opinion on security deposit practices? I initially did not set one thinking it might turn off guests, especially for our listing that had no reviews. When I read up more closely on the deposit, I think I read a host can claim up to that amount in the Payment Center. If I read that accurately, what happens in unit with a $200 security deposit and $1000 worth of damages? I was and remain suspicious of the “collect up to” the security deposit wording.
Thanks again, everybody! This has been great feedback. I would like to give Airbnb hosting another shot once our nurses move on to the next assignment, but I’ll need to incorporate the many lessons learned here.