Hello out there,Might any of you be willing to share your ex...
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Hello out there,Might any of you be willing to share your experience of hosting refugees through Airbnb? Much appreciated!Ann
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We just spent the last few months renovating and upgrading our home. It's a home we will spend 7 months a year in. The other 5 months we plan on listing it on Airbnb for some added income and to share our home with those who appreciate what our location offers. However, after our very first guests left our place an absolute and utter mess I have to reevaluate our intentions. How can people be so disrespectful? I am beyond disappointed. How do I prevent this? Our co-host, who is a superhost was just as, if not more-so, disgusted with how our home was left. I have been an infrequent traveler with Airbnb, but have always made it a point to leave the property in the condition it was presented. Shaking my head.
Hi @Joseph2423 , I'm sorry to hear that the aftermath of the stay left you disappointed. Usually, Hosts encourage other Hosts in our community to leave honest reviews in such situations. Have you shared an honest review for this guest's stay?
I wonder what our experienced Hosts in the Community who engaged on similar topics , would advise you regarding this instance — and if they could help us here by sharing some tips. Hi @Fred13 @Sara8246 @Gary1164 @Michelle1588 @Greg2406 @Jonathan2534 @John5097 @Mary1523 , do you have any tips that can help Host Joseph during such situations?
@Joseph2423 I sympathize, I just had a similar experience. I've come to the conclusion you'll need to vet the guests you accept very carefully. You'll need to depend on the reviews, only accept guests that have 5 star reviews that explicitly state they left the house in perfect condition. The 5 star reviews with no comments mean nothing.
You can also put in your rules an extra cleaning fee for extra messes. You'll have to be really descriptive, as someone's "clean" house, could be your nightmare.
Edit: I took a look at your home, it looks great. If I ever stay there with my family I promise it will be clean when we leave!!
Hi @Joseph2423 Sorry that this has happened to you. What exactly defined an 'utter mess'.? Did they break any of your house rules? Did they have a party against your rules and it was obvious? Could you provide a little more context? Was this Doug who gave you a great review already thats gone public? And Doug seemed to have a very good profile history.
Generally speaking guests on the whole are very good, but you will get the occasional horrid booking.
I found I did have to be explicit with the Checkout rules (I had my own far before Airbnb implemented the list), but make sure you have a good list of checkout rules. Because then you can hold guests to account.
I ask that they tidy up, take garbage down to bins at gate, clean BBQ (which hardly ever happens so i just suck that up), return furniture to original location, wipe down kitchen (some do, some don't). I don't expect vacuuming or bathroom cleaning etc. If its OK but they haven't broken enough house rules, then i'll still give them 5, but i do say in comments 'Guest left house OK' which gives a hint to other hosts, they weren't immaculate (and only a small % ever are). If enough of my house rules were not adhered to, then i rate them 4 and say 'guests were polite and clearly enjoyed themselves. some minor issues in not adhering to cleanliness of house rules but otherwise ok'.
I had a look at your listing, what a wonderful place! The few things that immediately stood out for me though as a potential issue (and this is entirely personal) that might cause a different expectation of 'mess' is the spa, garage and lounge.
The Spa because, well its a maintenance thing and there's nothing to say, clean it, leave it as found, tidy up around it etc.
The garage because, well, so many wonderful things to use, but who is to say guests will put it back exactly as placed? They generally won't, if they use it! It will be haphazardly thrown back and that's their definition of done. Unless you label where you want everything to be put back, and then in house rules say, 'put everything back in garage where found' (which is a bit over the top tbh).
The lounge/chairs because they are white. I love white. But over time, surely guests are going to stain them, stand on them, spill something on them etc. Easy for a mess to occur there. Are they easy to clean?
Without understanding context of mess though, sometimes its incumbent on us to minimise the risk of 'mess' in the first place. Don't leave anything out that you don't want broken, or don't provide things that potentially can cause issues is my advice. And if we want the income but enjoy our holiday house, need to remember we are in the hospitality business and it's not really your home under those circumstances - it just a holiday property for guests. We need to change our own expectations especially if you maintain an immaculate home in the first place. You kinda need to suck up it in order for the income in my humble opinion. Can't have our cake and eat it too.. I feel like my guests fall into less than 10% that are troublesome, majority are ok to good, and remainder are absolutely perfect. Learning to filter out guests without good profiles also helps.
Kind regs
Hope this helps
MK
Been sometime since I posted. Life has kepted me quite busy. 🙂
Joseph, three things to consider -
1. Was this a fluke? Best not to arrive at a broad theory from a rare exception.
2. Keep in consideration your setting - a beach, sandy environment, which doesn't tend to stay too clean physically.
3. The mistake (and solution) may lie with your pricing, as it is it's an invitation to what just happened to you. This is why - you charge the same from 1-8 people; 2 people are one reality, 8 is quite another, so why the same price per night.
So a couple is interested in coming and starts to think of how cool it is if they invite 6 others of their friend they will be staying practically for free ($375/8= $46 per person, Motel 6 prices). Good deal. oftentimes those they are inviting are 'party' friends, not those even interested in the place. If its a family with kids, be ready for some serious upkeep after they leave - for that price.
If you feel you can charge more, consider $395 for first 2 persons, $50 per person after that. At that price you will get a more 'concious' clientele, that's for sure and may allow you to feel it is all worth it. Btw, maybe limit the place to 6 people, 'more acording to group composition'.
We started with a 'first-2 person'+ model 9 years ago (at $295, now at $895) and today everytime we get a herd of wildebeasts and the wife starts complaining about the cleaning chaos I remind her how much we are making and she goes on her merry way preparing the place for the next guests, probably thinking how many pairs of new shoes it translates to. 🙂
Good luck