Has anyone ever had a guest cancel their payment after movin...
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Has anyone ever had a guest cancel their payment after moving in. I have a guest staying 30 days. He has been with me for ...
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I had an awful guest experience and tried to settle it with the guest personally. She stayed at a reduced rate and then needed to extend her stay. We gave her an even bigger rate discount. When she left, she left the place a mess. Dirty, greasy dishes, pots and pans. All the furniture was in dissaray, both sets of blankets/quilts had spots and stains on them, there were crumbs in all the beds on the mattress pads (which had to be hand picked off), and she ruined a set of sheets.
I took 3 days to cool off before I texted her because we really went out of our way to help this guest and she took advantage of us. I told her I was unhappy about the state of the place and asked her to pay $50 to replace the sheets. Prior to this text, she had nothing but glowing reviews and thanks for me in all her texts. She did not understand why she should have to pay for her sheets because I was a woman and the damaged sheets were a result of a "woman thing" and thus I should understand. I said I shouldn't have to pay for her "woman thing".
After much internal debate, I decided to warn other hosts and gave her an appropriate but still not brutal review, even leaving out the refusal to pay for damages and passing on her lame excuse for the mess. She then gave me a bad review, lying about my place and me. Prior to this review, I had 5 star reviews. Now people think my place is noisy and I am rude. My bookings have almost stoped dead in their tracks after her review. Plus, my 3 month pre-book for Jan-March canceled right after the review. I have contacted Airbnb twice about this to no avail. I had responded to her bad review, but not in much detail because I assumed that if I could prove it was a retaliatory review, it would be removed. THIS IS NOT THE CASE! Not only will they not remove it, they won't even let me expound on my explanation to her bad review.
So frustrated! I am knee deep in the process of spending a lot of money to make my other 2 rentals Airbnb rentals and now I can't even get bookings in prime season. Airbnb penalizes us for trying to warn other hosts about bad guests.
Answered! Go to Top Answer
Unfortunately there is probably nothing you can do about it. Things like this happen to all of us (guests, especially newer ones have wildly different expectations) and I hate the fact that one bad review plants a seed in future guests' minds (for example, I had one who stayed for nearly a month and I left town for nearly a week - I live in the part of the home - I came back and she had left an old pizza box, empty bottles,etc....her review dinged me for cleanliness?!)
Some guests are just horrible and/or petty (and I'm sure a handful of hosts are not so great either) but the best thing to do is learn from it.
I never leave a review for a guest unless I've personally interacted with him/her. I do this because if you are the first to leave a review, your guest sees that you left one and if they felt their stay was unpleasant, they have nothing to lose by leaving you a nasty review. A host may rely on sharing their home to cover a significant portion of housing costs, extra income, etc. but a guest may book an Airbnb once or twice a year. And even if guests get not so great reviews, in many cities there are plenty of hosts who would just be happy for the income.
I've been fortunate to have not yet had many "nightmare" guests but I would learn from this experience - do not be the first to review a guest! If they feel strongly about your space (negative or positive) they will usually leave a review. If I've had a weird situation/neutral, I don't bother. If my interaction was positive, I ask them to send me private feedback as to what I can do better. If someone leaves a review, you can comment on it but if you think someone had a less than stellar experience, you as a host leaving a review only prompts a guest to leave one as well (which may be unfair, misleading, etc.)
Saw your listing and I really don't think your guest's review was that bad. If anything it was probably prompted by your interaction with her following her stay. You have 5 stars and it was overall a positive review! I have no plans to go to Tucson but I'd stay in your place! In the future, I'd just let small inconveniences like that go. Don't be a pushover but understand accidents happen and sometimes minor things occur with otherwise well-meaning guests:
-No smoking but someone opens a window thinking they can get away with it
-Someone breaks a glass
-Uses toilet and "forgets" to flush (nasty but happens)
My advice:
1.) Do not post a review first - Regardless of what you do, you get sometimes get less than 5-stars! If you've had a less than fantastic dialogue with a guest, posting a review prompts them to do the same - in your case, she knew you were upset about the sheets & was probably defensive about being asked to pay $50 for an accident - If she thought you were upset with her as a host, I am not suprised that she didn't give you a fantastic, glowing review in response to the notification that you had left her a review.
2.) Don't sweat the small stuff
3.) Just buy a $10 set of sheets from Wal-Mart and consider it a "cost of doing business" if they are ruined at some point
@Gillian166 A review that just reads "." would be classified as "irrelevant", which is one of the reasons you can ask for a review to be removed.
I don't understand your comment about the husband not speaking English so why he would be the account holder? Guests speak a myriad of languages and certainly don't all speak English and can write reviews in whatever language they choose.
He's an Australian citizen, not an int'l traveller, you might have a different opinion from me but I believe if you're going to relocate to a new country to live, learning the language should be a priority (he's been here 6 years). He didn't once respond to a single message in the app, and his wife did all the communicating once they arrived. None of the men would speak to us actually except for the 13yo boy, but the wife, her sisters and her mum were lovely and chatty. Remember the booking originally was just for 2 people, ha, and I met her whole family.
@Gillian166 Well, there are tons of Americans who have lived in Mexico for 15-20 years and can still barely speak a word of Spanish. They hire "facilitators" to do everything for them that requires at least some basic Spanish.
Often it's just laziness, and an "Oh, I can get by" attitude, but some people also have a hard time learning a new language. If they have a spouse who is fluent, they often just rely on the spouse to translate.
And even when some people can understand most of what is said to them, they are shy to try to speak a language they aren't fluent in, or be able to write well in it.
You tell that to all the English speaking immigrants living in Spain, France, Turkey , Greece and the Middle East @Gillian166
@Kate2097 "I get a feeling that my profile is marked "ignore and do not help" in the system after I posted this review for a guest. "
Nah. You're not special- everyone is treated to the "ignore and do not help" and the "My shift is about to end" or "I'll be away from my desk for the next few days" treatment.
And judging by some of the posts here from guests with legitimate-sounding issues, it's not even limited to hosts- guests get ignored as well.
Customer service has just become a nasty joke.
"Customer service has just become a nasty joke".
They aren't there for customer service. They are all "Ambassadors"???!!!!
...sorry totally agree, I've just been a victim of their "help".
I just had a horrible experience with the guest, in fact I contacted AirBnB to shorten their stay. I was grateful for the kindness of customer service to help me get them out right away. I knew if I wrote a review most likely their retaliation review would show up. If I don’t review them they can’t review me.
This person had no reviews prior to accepting. This was a business decision I made. This was a learning experience.
Some people are toxic, I tried to remove them from my consciousness. Why would I want to be reminded of them on a thread.
I was happy to see that a review came through on them from another Airbnb host that showed up after he arrived here. Their review will be enough warning to future host.
I also changed my settings, I did have a auto setting discount for 28 day. I have removed that. I think it was a attracting bottom feeders looking for cheap places to stay. Business decision not worth it.
@Susan737 “I knew if I wrote a review most likely their retaliation review would show up. If I don’t review them they can’t review me.”
Your uderstanding of how reviews work is wrong.
https://www.airbnb.ca/help/article/13/reviews-for-stays
I just followed that link that you sent and here’s what it stated. “
@Susan737 "If I don’t review them they can’t review me."
This is 100% incorrect. All reviews are published after 14 days regardless of whether both parties have left a review. You can't avoid a bad review by not leaving a review yourself.
Also, reviews are blind. A guest can't see the review you left for them until the review is published and once they are published, a review cannot be submitted, so they can't retaliate to what you wrote in their review.
Now, some bad guests who are well aware they were bad guests may not leave a review unless they get a notice that you have left a review. Although they can't see the review you left, they assume it will be bad, so they leave a bad review. What many hosts do in these situations is to wait until 10 minutes before the 14 day review deadline is over, then submit their pre-written review. By the time the guest sees the notice that you have left a review, it will be too late for them to submit a review.
However, if you get a notice that the guest has left a review before the review period is over, there is no point to waiting to submit a review yourself. Not submitting a review will not prevent the guest's review from being published.
Not leaving honest reviews for your guests is a huge disservice to other hosts. I'm sure you would have appreciated being warned about this guest, so that you could have declined their booking in the first place. Not leaving reviews for bad guests makes having a review system totally pointless.
You are definitely not understanding the review policy you quoted. It means that reviews are published after both parties have submited theirs, or after 14 days. So if you and the guest both submit reviews 2 days after they check out, the reviews will be published then. Otherwise, any reviews submitted are published after 14 days.
@Sarah977 wow I did not know this and this makes me nervous. So the 14 days start from checkout day. Maybe I should put that on my calendar. Yes I was feeling guilty about not doing a review.
I have to say this person doesn’t seem the type to write a review. As I said there is a review on this person so future host will see that review. Yikes
@Susan737 The 14 days start exactly from when you get the first notification email to write a review. So if you get it at 3 pm on the 1st, the 14 days will be over at 3pm on the 15th.
There is apparently a countdown timer next to your message stream witth the guest, that tells you how many days you have left, and on the last day, tells you how many minutes are left. I have never had a guest I had to leave a bad review for, so I haven't ever had to look for it, but other hosts here have said that is where to find it.
I’m so glad today I went onto the community website. I’m going to make a point of getting on it more often.
I learned so much today. 1. I learned that I am not alone with some of my issues. 2. Learning more about the platform. 3. It’s extremely kind of people to take the time to address our issues. Thank you. 🙂
I feel you r pain my friend.
I had a similar experience.
Guest arrived
15 minutes later , I got call from Airbnb saying , the guest said my place was filthy, run down etc..etc.
no photographic evidence, and she didn't look for alternative accommodation...hmmm..sounds like domestic pressure to me to get home...
I'm a superhost 90% + 5 Star rating over 1k guests, previous and post guests gave me 5 star review.
Asked Airbnb to take down her review....no joy.
I find AIrbnb support staff aren't too bright...pay peanuts etc...
not happy with Airbnb support...
I'm currently dealing with the same thing. Airbnb doesn't seem to want to side with the host ever and this is extremely frustrating. A guest left me 1 star and there's no proof of even a complaint