Hi,
Today I was checking my credit card statement and saw ...
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Hi,
Today I was checking my credit card statement and saw that my card has been recently charged for a AirBnB trip I didn't...
Latest reply
About 16 months ago I had a couple from Great Britain who booked for a week and simply never arrived. I was new to hosting back then, so I simply kept the room is good order, making it ready for arrival each day, thinking that perhaps they would show up a bit later, but as the days turned into a week there was no sign of the couple. The reservation ended, the couple had never come to the house, yet I had been paid. Two more weeks past, there was no communication and no review.
Fast forward to today in October 2020. Another couple, this time from Texas, booked for five days. On day three, no sign of them and no communication. I have seen people suggest we contact guests in these situations to ask their intentions and if they are okay. But, and I might sound harsh here, is that really my responsibility? I have done everything I have needed to do to get the room ready and make the house ready for their arrival. Is it my job to be their caretaker, find out where they are, and check on their status? There was actually a similar case, which I read about a few months back, where somebody did this on the second or third day, and the guest sent a sob story asking for a refund even though two days had already gone by and it was against the host's refund policy.
I'd be curious to hear if anyone else has ever had a guest pay for a week (or longer) and then simply never show up.
By-passing Canadian Quarantine rules using Airbnb,
We had guests that have booked a month and never stayed in the unit. They were traveling from Egypt and needed a quarantine address to come into the country. They made a reservation, came to say hello, and left. They wrote asking for the internet codes; we gave them the codes again, they were not even there. At the end of the month they asked for a refund, we refused, and they gave us a 1-star rating everywhere.
2 things come up in my mind. Why can the guest rate something they have not tried? And why Airbnb is encouraging these illegal actions?
Unfortunately, we have lost our super host rating because of this guest. I believe more and more guest will be using short quarantine rentals, there should be a quarantine gests regulations.
Here are a few suggestions to help improve the platform.
It might be a good idea to have a mandatory question when guests are placing a reservation; for example," When you arrive, will you be in quarantine under Canadian quarantine law? Is this reservation used as isolation or quarantine location with the Canadian Customs and Border Patrol or any regulator? ". It would ask them if they are coming from a foreign country, and they are required to quarantine or if this address is used for this.
First of all, this would be a responsible thing to do in order to help protect Canadians fight this Virus. The safety and wellbeing of cleaning staff, guest and surrounding guests as well is our priority. When notified of foreign travelers, we can introduce additional measures. We have a common room where the guest does laundry, so we have set in place some set days for laundry; after quarantine guest's day, the room is not accessible for the next 24h.
We do not mind having quarantine guests. Some hosts might prefer not or are simply not set up to accommodate these guests. Host can make sure they do not have people who are, 65 years or older, have underlying medical conditions, or have compromised immune systems before accepting the reservation or even making the units available for this type of reservation.
It could avoid bad reviews like; not being present on arrival and could do this virtually instead, the readiness of the accommodation or even wrongfully guests asking for a refund at the end of stay even if they were just using Airbnb as a fictional address at the Canadian ports of entry like I had.
Since we have had a few of these guests, we now know that they require more services. They usually come in empty-handed and have nothing to eat and cannot go and get it. They don't have cars, and they are not allowed to take a taxi. We have got the first groceries for quarantine guests before. Knowing that this type of guest is coming, we can prepare them and provide them with local grocery delivery services and other services we all take for granted. I am sure Airbnb will put a list of things together to better prepare hosts and guests. Some of our units also only have a minibar fridge, that can only have a few days of food
Unfortunately, this is our new reality, and we are only at the beginning of it. Let's be proactive in this. We remain committed to placing the safety and wellbeing of our guests.
Hi @Daniel7749 Scary story, sorry to hear you went through this. I am surprised the negative review is standing; you can't get it removed?
@Daniel7749- That should be treated as a guest who never arrived and AirBNB should be contacted relentlessly until they take down that review. Even if they showed up at the front door to introduce themselves, if they never entered the property or stayed in the room then it is a no show and they are prohibited from leaving a review.
This is also obviously a scam to establish residency. That is a very serious matter and AirBNB has strict policies against that as well. I would continue to pursue this until they remove the review.
Thanks for your feedback,
I have tried with Airbnb, they won’t do anything because they did not threaten me with a bad review, but we all know that no refund means a bad review. (Exchanging review with a threat, refund policy)
They did come in the unit to get welcomed, but they did not even take the key when they left. They obviously had no intention of staying. (They did come in the unit policy)
The sad thing is that I did have many people interested in the unit, I would have refunded them, but they asked on day 29 of the 30-day reservation.
I keep pursuing them; unfortunately, they are not open to any discussion. Precisely what policy would this be covered under?
@Daniel7749- Their review "Not Good", clearly falls under the policy against irrelevant reviews. I read the entire review you wrote on them as well, and since they actually did stay on the property, it cant be declared a no-show that is true. However, the irrelevant review clause clearly applies as does the outlier review rule, mainly that you have received nothing but positive reviews from other guests, and this bad review was clearly someone leaving a highly negative review for some other reason, mostly likely retaliation for not having received a refund.
I would give AirBNB another try, tell them this is an irrelevant review left by someone who was operating a scam to establish a residency address and also was retaliation for not having received a refund. if that doesn't work, post this story to the AirBNB Facebook page. Also, I would add in that these people were probably also operating a fake profile. If this was a couple from Egypt, I can guarantee the person's name was not "Mary" and that they were probably using a false name on the AirBNB profile.
I had a couple in the beginning of my hosting experience try to establish residence as well and I fought back and stopped them from leaving a negative review. Hopefully you will be able to do the same.
@Anthony608 I can relate as I had a fellow from Hong Kong who was in this mindset. Excellent advice you have provided.
leslie@1120RailwayAve
Hi so this Friday at 4am our time a guest instantly booked last minute for 5 nights. I sent details. I follow up in the evening asking for a text that they arrived safely. Yesterday after being asked to review guest through Air BNB the renter calls me asking why I charged her as she never booked with us...
I was going down to clean today. I told her to sort it with AirBnB . I am getting loads of glitches lately like not responding quickly enough although I respond in minutes... Anyone else?