removal of bad reviews

Shellie27
Level 1
Brisbane, Australia

removal of bad reviews

This one guest has been an ongoing issue - FIrstly the used the property for 7 hours then demanded an imedieate refund at 11:48 pm or they would "report us to Airbnb".  

 Then after checking the property to make sure nothing was stolen, we gave the refund to rid the guest.  However 15 mins later Airbnb also gave them a refund.  Airbnb then took both those payments from our earnings.   Then they admitted their mistake but asked us to ask the threatening guest to return the money. Um No! 

 

I left an honest 1 star review,  that airbnb removed.   I had to demand to have it reinstated as it was factual.  They reinstated it after a few days but then did not Adjust the guests star rating to reflect review, so that was another process. 

 

Since then I have been trying to have the guests review removed as it had multiple false claims. 

 

Firstly, the guest used the property for 7 hours before raising any issues. Including the shower, bath, complimentary gift packs, open fireplace.  Which is against our policy of please contact upon arrival.

 

They claimed in there review that there was no gardens to explore and that the property lacked privacy. 

This is factually incorrect—our property is a self-contained stand-alone cottage, all surrounded by expansive gardens that are maintained by a gardening team. Full shutters on all windows and a private fenced garden. 

 

The guest also mentioned that communication ended,  however, we spoke to them back and forth for 20 mins in the chat and then they were informed that we would reconnect in the morning. They also stated we gave excuses for the property, No excuses were made regarding our cleaning staff, as confirmed by communication records.

 

The "dust-ridden" claim is inaccurate—we have photos from our cleaner taken at the end of their stay and previous guests had no complaints about cleanliness.

 

It is a mountain retreat, and a spider can easily spin a cobweb in 30-60 minutes, which explains the presence of two cobwebs on a light fitting. 

 

Regarding the spa, the guest used the spa and towels before claiming the spa was too dirty to stay.

 

This inconsistency further raises concerns about the accuracy of their claims.

 

Additionally, the review stated the issue was only resolved by Airbnb, which is incorrect. We provided a full refund after inspecting the property. 

The guest climed up onto a table to remove the aircondition filter then proceeded to wash it to show a before and after photo, which one can only assume is a tactic to gain a refund. Especially since the guest claimed it was a severe health hazard to be in the cottage, yet stayed for 7 hours used the facilties and cleaned an airconditioner.  Which was cleaned 3 months prior,  but you wash any filter you will get a before and after shot. 

 

So guest did not follow house rules, guest tampered with an electrical device, guest used threatening behaviour to demand a refund. 

All these things against Airbnbs own policy.

 

As Superhosts with over 4 years in the industry, this review is based on false information should be removed according to Airbnb's own policies. 

 

So someone explain to me why this review is not getting removed? When our own review was so easily removed ? 

2 Replies 2
Zheng49
Level 10
Toronto, Canada

@Shellie27 I am not able to see that review; was it removed?

@Shellie27 Sorry to hear about your experience. Sounds stressful. And not the guests you want.

 

I notice you are a very new host of this property (acknowledge you have other properties ?) Not to discount your bad experience but I have some thoughts so that this doesn't happen again.

 

Everyone's perceptions of properties can vastly differ, and after 9 years of hosting, I still get surprised. Not everyone's perceptions are the same as you the host.

 

I read your cottage listing - what a delightful place! Lovely part of the world - been there before.

I can see how it appeals to many who are familiar with this type of property and what they are seeking. But as you get more guests, you are going to get some who just don't understand it.

 

What lept out at me, is that your description is very light on. This is your space to take advantage of educating guests on expectations. eg the gardens. Same may literally take the white picket fence as the border of the property. Are the garden photos private to the cottage? Or public accessible? That wasn't clear to me.

Yes I would expect all window coverings, but if gardens are on offer, it's not clear how much and how. Can I have a picnic outside privately etc?

 

As for cleaning, I sympathesize. I run a farm property, and yep spiderwebs are the bane of my life. I constantly get rated down on cleanliness because a spider has appeared in the last 24 hours and spun a web somewhere (Australian native borns get this, but sometimes international tourists don't). So it's up to us to put that in the description under 'things you need to know' eg We have strict cleaniliness requirements, and we do spray and pest control regularly but if you do see something like a stray spider web, apologies in advance, it's a rural property'. 

 

My country farm property has 15 points in 'Things you need to know'. I am constantly refining this to manage expectations.

 

As for reviews, this is a lesson for all hosts and one I learnt the hardway as well. Airbnb are very reluctant to remove any guest review, it would have to be horrendous to be removed. What you described isn't horrendous, but probably classifies as they would call it, a 'different opinion'. So you have an opportunity to do a public response to their review. Use this to your advantage. Address not the guest, but future guests like this ('Dear Future Guests, we love having guests who understand what this wondeful romantic property has to offer. Unfortunately it's not suitable for everyone but we do promise you a fabulous 5 star experience with homey gorgeous cottage, gardens to wander etc etc "

 

I'm sorry that this isn' what you want to hear, but we've all been there. We use experiences like this to sharpen our listings, be clear on what we offer, use all the space in the listing description that you have to get guests to self qualify in that your listing is right for them.

 

Btw you didn't say what the rating was on the guest, and what was their prior hosting experiences were like. I don't take anyone new UNLESS they've communicated well with me and clear on expectations. Mine is not the type of property to experiment on in all honesty.

 

Also as an experienced host, I now avoid staying with listings that are light on detail, because that tells me the host probably isn't listening to their customers on what's important. Sure I could ask lots of questions, but I don't have time, they've probably been asked before, but haven't thought it was important to put in their listing.

 

Just my 2 cents, hope you take in the spirit intended and learn from the mistakes of the rest of us!

All the best, I'm sure your next bookings will be fine! 

Kind regs MK