I sometimes don't know the best way to respond to reviews.
Latest reply
I sometimes don't know the best way to respond to reviews.
Latest reply
I just had a mentally ill guest who stayed for a week. She was very respectful and quiet but when she left I received a disturbing message about how her shoes and a lid on her food were slightly moved. She then when on to say I said bad things about her and that I should have respected her.
First off, no one was in her room. I do not go in guests rooms and my security cams show no one trespassing during her stay. Plus the doors are locked. Also, I never had any sort of interaction with this guest. She pulled up once when I was out front and she did not get out of her car until I went in the house.
I'm assuming she has some sort of detachment issues that trigger mental illness. A couple other hosts have mentioned her 'questionable behavior'. She gives hosts 1 star reviews with false accusations such as: "shady people lurking around the house". It's apparent the way it's worded that the review is written by a mentally unstable person.
I called airbnb after she left to alert them of this person's odd behavior and to see if I could warn other hosts somehow. They asked me what I wanted them to do. I was calling them because I did not know what to do... They did say I could object to a review that I felt was questionable so it is looking like I have to through this process.
The thing is that this person was a great guest, despite the disturbing message. However I think most 'normal' hosts (not inner city types like myself) would be very frightened by her message. I was at first concerned she was back there with a knife or gun, since she heard voices that "I was saying bad things about her". Then after viewing her in security cams, etc. I am likening this person to the sort of mentally ill you see wandering around the city. Not to say there is no danger, but most likely a very disturbed person. I feel bad for her.
Also, she requested that she books a month. I said there was already a booking for a couple days in the month, and she responded with an "OK, thank you". Its clear she is trying to get squatting rights. This person then created a fake profile with a different name and put in a booking request. I knew it was her because the text in the message was identical and the profile photo was mysterious, it was just a black dot. After a few days, the request was cancelled by the guest. I mentioned this to airbnb and I am surprised they did not even look into it. There is now a legal risk involved that I guess they are ok with.
Has anyone else dealt with a mentally ill guest, or a guest who straight up lies and you gives you a low review based on delusions? Airbnb clearly does not want to be bothered with this sort of thing. So we have to protect ourselves as host. I feel bad for this person and may actually host her again as a way to help, but I am concerned about getting false bad reviews and of course the squatting attempt, as weak as it was, is a big concern. For now, I will leave a very honest review. It sucks because airbnb's lack of willingness to handle this sort of situation means she will not get hosted because who wants to risk a bad review.
With all the employees airbnb has, you think they would have a solution for this since its not uncommon (look at other posts). One solution could be a message to hosts that they will be hosting a mentally ill guest and that hosts can flag reviews that are false for review by airbnb, while they considered the special situation. I just came up with this. Maybe I should be getting a $250k a year salary!
Hi Robert, I have just had a lady that I have worked out had a serious mental health disorder. Constant drama, trying to manipulate me to be crisis housing for her, a lot of lies and changing her story every few hours.
I don't think people can be labeled for any disability but it would be better for everyone if there was more screening of guests. I am sure I am not the first host to struggle with this lady. I also thought she would start trying to squat.
Thank you for sharing your very similar experience as mine. It has really upset my family and we won't do stays longer than 4 days now. It is making me question if I keep hosting at all. I hope after hosting some more short-stay-happy guests traveling though, that this nightmare will become a distant memory that I have learned from. Otherwise we will just stop - it's not worth it.
Another odd place I have experience dealing with.
The legal issue here that Airbnb will be watching is if you make a public statement about someone's mental health when you are not considered a qualified opinion
Do not rent again to help. Your intentions are good but again your not qualified, trained or have resources available if she suffers a crisis in her mental health.
Yes I would want to warn other hosts. You could ding her on communication Poor communication with Host caused a major inconvenience. It did you were checking security of a guest's shoes.
I'm having a similar problem and like you, AirBnB is completely unhelpful They are taking $500/mth and sending me $2000. For $500/mth it seems like they would be a lot better prepared for such a common problem.
Most (not all) the guess we are having give troubles. People come here for a week thinking the own the property . The past 3 guests ....did not know how to use the water mixer in the shower claiming that the geyser was not working, hit the gate with the car , I had to call for a fix , broke the toilet flashing lever , claiming money back saying that internet was not working, prostituting in the house , breaking a glass shower box , destroying a mattress, selling drug , doing online scamming . We had to vacate the house because the police came . Menthal illness ? This become a zoo