Yet more chaos and confusion caused by Airbnb's lack of clarity and transparency. Bottom line - the entire guest suite category (amongst others), was introduced by Airbnb to further muddy the waters and blur the lines between the small individual host and commercial operator categories, thereby making it even more difficult for regulators and authorities to figure out the true state of play with the Home Host vs Pro Host picture on the platform.
Airbnb couldn't actually give a flying fig who lists what on their site, or how they list it, and indeed, have already spent hundreds of millions on court battles across the globe, in order to be allowed carry on abdicating all responsibility for the authenticity or legality of the properties they advertise (and profit handsomely from).
You could list the Taj Mahal, the Sydney Opera House or Buckingham Palace on Airbnb, and they wouldn't bat an eyelid - until a guest complains that there was a dead bug on the window sill or insufficiently quilted toilet roll to wipe their delicate arses, that is... in which case, they'll come down on the host like a ton of bricks (well, depending on how many other properties the host has in their Airbnb portfolio, of course. Commercial operator with oodles of properties - a friendly word, or a slap on the wrist, at worst. Small, independent host with 1 or 2 listings - suspension or delisting, no questions asked, no right of appeal given)
Otherwise though, they really couldn't care less about what's listed on the site, or how it's listed - as long as a property is bringing home the bacon for them, and not drawing unwanted attention to their (our) doors, that's all that matters.