I stayed at an airbnb 2 weeks and i brought home bed bugs fr...
I stayed at an airbnb 2 weeks and i brought home bed bugs from this stay . Is there anything i can do to have airbnb cover th...
Hi @Carly142
I'm really sorry to hear about this.
Have you followed up with Airbnb yet? Please let us know how you're getting on.
If you still need help please let us know and we can give Support a nudge to get in touch.
Jenny
@Carly142 @Jenny The thing is, Third party bookings are not supposed to happen and we (well certainly I have been) are constantly warned that we are not covered for damages etc. if the ‘Responsible Guest’ does not stay unless the booking was made under the ‘Booking for Work’. Therefore both Hosts and Airbnb need to rely on the guests honesty. In this case, Airbnb did pay out for these third party damages as if the ‘responsible guest’ stayed even though they were aware that she had not and I assume have left the review because they treated this booking as though she had.
I Feel your pain, this same thing happened to me , a guest booked my place and did not stay at my location. The people who stayed, did not follow any house rules, since I was a host on site, I reminded the guest of the house rules. On the Second night I became aware that the guest had booked the location for her aunt. The person who booked the listing wrote an review that was not the truth and hurt my rating. I also had conversations with Airbnb to remove review, it did not end well. The review stayed and I was left upset and not happy with how our support team. Reviews should be left my the guest and not some person pretending to be the guest. This policy must change! I have now taken matters into my own hand and ask for a photo ID, upon arrival at my location.
After approximately 2 weeks and *so many* hours of phone conversations I did finally get the review removed.
Here’s my advice on how to get airbnb to enforce their own policies:
1. Continue to ask for your case to be escalated until someone not reading from a script is willing to actually look at your case, documentation, and information.
2. Once you get to the right person, clearly outline how you as a host have followed airbnb policy and the guest has not, and that you the host are not not only having to deal with the fallout from a bad guest but also now having to convince airbnb to follow their own written policy to protect you, the rule following host. Their policies are in place to protect both guests *and hosts* and they need to take the impact this situation is having on you, your property, your listing, and your business seriously with all fair and due consideration. (Ie. Not tell you to pound sand)
3. Remind airbnb how bad and potentially dangerous 3rd party bookings are. Remind airbnb in the same way you should be doing everything in your power as a host to keep 3rd party bookings from happening, airbnb also has a responsibility to discourage and hold 3rd party bookings accountable. Allowing any “internal policies” to uphold, legitimize, and allow for 3rd party bookings is not only in direct contradiction of their online written policy, but also will encourage people who are already abusing the system to continue to break the 3rd party booking rule. Repeat that 3rd party bookings are potentially dangerous to both guests and hosts. Transparency about who is staying in your property is of the utmost importance to all parties involved and that you expect airbnb to take all matters (big or small) related to 3rd party bookings seriously.
4. Remind airbnb they have agreed to verify guests on the hosts behalf. (This is in compliance with their non discrimination policy- you are not able or allowed to know the details of a guest’s identity prior to a reservation) And although you will continue to be a vigilant host and uphold airbnb policy, airbnb is booking a “verified guest” to stay in your property, not you as a host. If they allow for abuse of this system, the verification policy is no longer useful or trustworthy.
5. *Most important* say exactly this:
“I have reviewed the [insert all policies relating to case] online. As this is all that is available to me, these are the policies I agreed to when I decided to host my property with airbnb. I do not know what “internal policy” I am being expected to abide by, as that is not available to me.
If this “internal policy” is not available to hosts and in contrast with your publicly listed policies, you cannot expect to hold hosts accountable for secret policies they do not have access to.
—
Here is what I read online on your community policies help center-
The review policy states “reviews must be:
Hi Carly !
Thank you very much for sharing such a valuable experience.
I'm now trying to dispute the 3 star review that a guest who made a reservation left me (however he only made the reservation for others, he was not at my place).
In first instance, Airbnb removed the review because it was against their policies, however after 30 minutes they decided to put it again.
This is such a stressful situation. I hope you could please guide me ! Thank you very much
Hi @Carly142
I'm so glad you were persistent and got the review removed. I do see under your additional Rules that you do not allow 3rd party bookings. You might be able to get a review removed on the basis the guest broke your House Rules in the future. However, as you point out, the review should have been removed anyway, as the guest who booked it did not stay at your place.