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Tag Archives: airbnb account closed

Airbnb Account Deleted After Attempted Fraud

Posted on September 5, 2018

Recently I tried to use Airbnb to book a room in Miami. With a couple of days before I travelled, I could not complete a booking as it seemed there was some technical issue with my card on the platform (I had used Airbnb before to book a place in Rio and had good reviews for my bookings and no problems). I contacted customer support and got an email saying my problem was being escalated and then nothing. There was no further contact so in the end I had to reluctantly book a hotel.

Upon my return I noticed that there was a debit and a credit for a booking from what seemed to be someone in Glasgow on my account. It had nothing to do with me and seemed to be a failed attempt at fraud. The next communication I received said my account was being terminated with no explanation or dialogue about the fraud attempt. In fact, there was nothing apart from “goodbye, you are blocked forever.”

To say Airbnb customer service is a joke is an understatement. How the founders of this company can walk around in public without hanging their heads in shame I do not know. They have by proxy impugned my reputation, left me with a very nasty taste in my mouth, and now I have a burning desire to tell everyone who will listen not to use Airbnb. Don’t trust them and forget about customer service when dealing with them.

Accused of being a Liar and Fraud by Airbnb

Posted on August 4, 2018

In November 2014, we started a bed and breakfast in the Dominican Republic. We rented a unit with three bedrooms so that we could rent out two bedrooms. We set up our own website and started getting business in January 2015. By the end of 2017 we noticed a considerable decline in customers. We queried our clients and those who learned of our service only after booking elsewhere and discovered that many were using Airbnb for bookings. We set up a listing on Airbnb to test out these waters.

The listing was just starting to bear fruit when, on April 10th, 2018, Airbnb inexplicably took it down. On April 16th, I sent Airbnb support the following message: “My listing was taken down on April 10th. I don’t know why. When I try to re-list, I get this error message: ‘Sorry, we cannot activate your listing.'”

On April 17th, I received the following unsigned message: “I’ve forwarded your inquiry to a member of my team who can better assist you. Please feel free to add any additional information to this email, and we’ll be in touch with you soon.”

On April 23rd, I followed up with the following message: “Excuse me, but when is the other member of your team going to get back to me? We are losing money here.”

Finally, on June 21st, I received the following reply:

“I hope this message finds you well. I work here on a specialized team that handles these types of reports. Due to the sensitivity of this matter, and for privacy reasons, I would like to follow up with you via email so please keep a look out for my message. Thank you kindly for your understanding!”

I’m still waiting for this email. The thread now says: “This support case is now closed. You can no longer reply to this thread. If you need additional help, you can always visit our Help Center.” There was no solution and no action on their part. We lost a lot of money.

In the end we had to give up the three-bedroom apartment due to no revenue. On July 22nd, we started looking for a place to stay for a vacation in Canada from September 28 to October 15. After days of searching and corresponding we settled on a place near Burleigh Falls, Ontario. 

Negotiations went well and the host sent us an offer that I tried to accept. However, I received this message: “Oops, we’re unable to complete this booking. Unable to perform action. Please try again through the website or contact support if you need immediate assistance.” I tried to find a phone number, but there is none listed on their site.

I wrote to Customer Support on July 26th. I received this reply later that day: “I’m with Airbnb Support. I’ll be helping you today. Give me a moment while I look into your case.” Then later on: “Unfortunately I’m unable to resolve your case over live chat. I’m going to transfer your case to a team that can better assist you. The next available specialist will review our conversation and reply here. Thank you for your patience; please note that response times may vary.”

I found a phone number for Airbnb on Airbnb Hell and called it. During the first phone call I was told that she could not resolve this issue, that it had to be handled by the next level. However, she would put it as a priority. Then, on July 28th I received a message in which the host called me a liar and scammer. She further said: “I called Airbnb and they said not to have any further contact with you because your payment information is red flagged for fraud. You can deal with them. I do not want your business. Please do not contact me again.”

I forwarded her message onto support using the same support ticket conversation. There was no answer. I called and brought this to their attention. Not only has Airbnb unjustifiably deprived me of needed revenue, they have defamed me and my reputation. This has caused me much stress. Adding to the stress is that we have booked our ticket to Canada and needed to find other accommodation during our stay.

I could neither find anything that matched our dates nor that was of similar quality for the price of this property. We settled for a lesser quality unit at a higher price across the lake from where we wanted to be and will have to book a hotel for dates that this place cannot handle. Researching this cost me a lot in stress and in time. Now there are added expenses of a hotel room that we would not have had to pay, if Airbnb had not slandered me. I have searched around and found that others have suffered similar fates with Airbnb. I think that this merits investigation as a possible class action suit. What is your opinion?

Account Suspended due to Verification, Still no Answers

Posted on December 17, 2017

I travel 270+ days a year for business in the tech industry. I thought Airbnb would be a good way to enjoy extended stays at different projects. I am a contractor so I am responsible for my own expenses. One of my favorite travel perks is my American Express Platinum Club membership; I use the points for everything. When I saw I could link my card directly to Airbnb and use points for my stays, I said to myself, “What a great convenience!”

My first Airbnb stay went great. I rented a penthouse condo for a week. Then the nightmare began, I was on business in Costa Rica to build a system to run a large call center, which would end up keeping me there for two months. I booked a few places to kind of Goldilocks my way around to find the best deal. I booked three locations, saw they were charged immediately to my Amex card, and went to sleep that night looking forward to a day of meetings.

When I woke up the next morning, I turned on my computer, only to see my account had been suspended due to verification. I immediately contacted Airbnb support. They asked me if the email had been from someone at customer support. When I said it was, their only answer was they would expedite a response. Half way through the day it got worse. Since Airbnb suspended my account, I could not access the location of the host where I was supposed to stay that night. I called Airbnb and they told me they could not give me that information, and I would still have to pay for the nights I reserved.

Having been a business traveler for over 30 years, I could never imagine reserving a hotel room, paying for it, then the hotel not giving me it’s location. I contacted American Express Platinum Services and they said that Airbnb had not tried to verify my account. Then things got bizarre. Airbnb sent me an email three days after this started asking for a picture of my Amex Card. I immediately called Amex and they informed me merchants were not allowed to ask for this kind of information. It has been two weeks since this incident and Airbnb has still failed to contact me or remove the suspension on my account. Don’t get me wrong, I would never use them again, but I worry because they have a copy of my passport on their system and I am worried about identity theft.

Blocked for Discrimination after Strange Booking

Posted on September 10, 2017

I’ve been blocked from Airbnb for discrimination, mainly because I mentioned the canceled guest’s country of origin in trying to explain that normally someone from 7,000 miles away doesn’t book in our tiny town, and that the person could not tell us why he booked here. On an afternoon this summer, a guest had booked for a stay starting three days later. We are in a town town in the middle of the Midwest, so there are specific reasons people usually give when they book.

This guest was coming from a place literally 7,000 miles away. I asked what brought him to the area, and he said “we are tourism” and would arrive in three to five hours. It seemed pretty odd that someone would arrive in less than five hours from somewhere 7,000 miles away. I responded and told him that he had not booked that day. He said he meant three days from then. I asked other questions (which I have screenshots of), but he did not and could not mention specifics regarding our area.

I checked his three reviews, which were brief and vague: “… was a great guest”; “very polite, friendly and clean person”; “excellent guest and well spoken and easy to communicate.” That was it. Normally when I check someone’s reviews, they’re pretty specific about the visit, so my weirdness radar had kicked in.

I called the Airbnb help number within six minutes of the booking to ask for guidance. The customer service representative I spoke to said that there were reviews on the Airbnb user and that he didn’t see anything odd with the guest, but that there was a policy that a host could cancel at least once (maybe twice?) without repercussion, and I had not done so before. I contacted the person who booked to try to elicit a better explanation, which is when he said he was going to be visiting a major city more than 200 miles and four hours from my Airbnb location.

It seemed odd; Airbnb’s website says: “Trust your intuition: If you don’t feel right about a reservation, don’t accept it!” It encourages guests to explain themselves and their trip to put their hosts at ease. This was not happening. The entire length of this booking was for about an hour; I try to respond to people as quickly as possible in regard to their travel. This was not a last-minute cancellation of something that had been booked for a long time. Suddenly, someone called from Airbnb (but actually probably from the arbitration company). This is when I should have had a lawyer right by my side, or just not agreed to talk on the phone.

I honestly could not even understand at first what would have caused the claim of discrimination against a nationality, because to me it was a decision based on multiple reasons, none of which were the specific country the person was from – it was the distance, the vagueness, and the indication that he would be visiting somewhere completely different, nowhere near my Airbnb. At the time of Airbnb’s initial indication that they were looking into me being discriminatory, there were two standing bookings at my property, and I conveyed my concern about those to the person who had called me from arbitration.

My account was delisted but not deactivated, so I assumed Airbnb would at least allow me to host the last two guests while making its decision. I heard nothing from Airbnb and lost a couple thousand dollars in income. At this point, I felt so personally gutted that I decided even if Airbnb were going to let me keep my account, I would never use them again because of the awful assumptions it made about me even though their employees could easily see, in messages, how weird the whole transaction was.

I got to host one of the two already-booked guests, but here it is five days before the last booked guest (who had a special need of having a place that accepts more than one pet), and my account has been deleted as of now and forever. Why would a company do that? I don’t even know what happens to that guest now. Is she totally out of luck? Where will she stay?

Of course, Airbnb uses forced arbitration clauses that give me no rights to even present the evidence I have of the person giving vague and incorrect answers to any questions I asked, nor did Airbnb apparently review a recording of the customer service representative telling me that I had a free cancellation to give. Would I have canceled without Airbnb’s permission? Likely, because of my gut feeling about the booking, but that certainly seemed to me to imply the company’s consent.

While waiting for the complete cancellation of my account, I’ve researched the legality and the common occurrences of Airbnb just leaving people high and dry for no reason. I understand they have to protect people from discrimination, and if I fit that category of one who discriminates, so be it; that’s apparently in the eye of the beholder. However, Airbnb seems to have totally erred on the side of caution when the word “discrimination” is invoked. I would try HomeAway or another company, but my Airbnb is not in a tourist town at all. One of the reasons I’d been booked every weekend is because I was one of three Airbnbs in the whole area. It’s very painful to do so much to tend to every little detail, build up a perfect rating from really happy guests, then have the rug pulled out from under me.

Guests Don’t Have Much Respect For Hosts

Posted on August 28, 2017

Airbnb ruined my life in 2015. I had two reservations as a guest, and since 2011 I have had nothing but positive reviews. I began to get stalked by some actors and a producer, as well as online trolls. That wasn’t my fault. After showing up at a host’s apartment, I noticed he gave me the wrong address; none of the neighbours knew him, there was something set up in the area to insult me, and the host didn’t answer the phone. I had to cancel but found two great hosts thereafter. Then my Airbnb account kept getting disabled; I couldn’t reserve any property.

I contacted Airbnb about this and asked politely if this was one of the individuals who had harassed me. Instead of clarifying this, Airbnb just closed my account leaving me stuck looking for accommodation during peak season with all affordable hotels and hostels fully booked. I had to buy a last minute flight and leave the country as I couldn’t find anywhere else to stay.

Recently I have been desperate to find a place to stay, and called Airbnb to see if they could reopen my account. They told me they deleted it permanently so I would lose all my hosts’ positive reviews. Since setting up another account, either the hosts and trolls or Airbnb began to post some extremely disturbing pictures for their properties which have been passed on to the police, USA Housing complaints commission, BBB and various other consumer rights advocacies. In one they had an illustration of a crucified woman naked that looked like me, in another had a room with wall paper that was tin foil with nothing else in the room but a hospital stand and a black condom hanging, and in another they were posting even images of women that resembled me. Another showed a tent in a public park charging $54 per night.

I have been cyberstalked since and left homeless. The police don’t want to help and these harassers have made it almost impossible for me to find a place to stay. There are social network trolls and then there are creeps posting photographs on rental sites the service should just get rid of. I had my account closed down for asking if an actor I detest had any contact with their agency, nothing else. They let creeps host with the most ridiculous rental offers but they often treat guests like crap.

If You Report Criminals, Airbnb Will Delete Your Account

Posted on August 6, 2017

I had to call the police because a nutcase Airbnb host in London wanted cash if I wanted to stay longer than planned (I had paid for three days or so). She demanded that the cash be pushed under the door of her room. I found that bizarre. My nieces and I decided not to prolong our stay. She refused to return our luggage. I had to call the police. Airbnb put us in a hotel but didn’t care about the fact that I had to call the police so other guests were probably exposed to that woman. This situation shows that: 1) Don’t trust Airbnb to care about criminals 2) Don’t pay for your whole stay online. If your host is a lunatic you may have trouble getting your money back. By the way, Airbnb didn’t ban the host. They banned me.

Account Disabled, Money Withheld from Long Time Host

Posted on July 23, 2017

Before I give my story regarding Airbnb, I want to state here that I am looking for other hosts that have similar stories, in hope of starting a class action lawsuit against Airbnb. Attorneys will only take a case against Airbnb if there is the potential of a large payout, and this can be accomplished only with a class action lawsuit.

I own a house in Havana and have had an Airbnb account for a bit over a year. I started hosting last year in December. From December 2016 to April 2017, I earned about 15,000€ and was really happy. I was booked out the entire time and got consistently good reviews; guests were happy to stay with me. I even got referrals from friends and family from guests who stayed.

Then, all of a sudden, on May 4th, 2017, I got a frantic message from a guest who was travelling in South America stating that I had cancelled his reservation. I had no idea what he was talking about, as I had not cancelled his reservation. In Cuba, aside from email, there is not much of any internet, so I went to an internet hotspot to check my Airbnb account. Upon attempting to log in, I was greeted with a message that my account had been temporarily disabled and to please write account.inquiry@airbnb.com. The only response I received was that they received my email and would respond to me shortly.

The following week I travelled to Germany and decided to call Airbnb customer service. Although very friendly, they weren’t able to handle my concern because some “other” department was handling it. Upon asking what other department, I was told that they could not tell me that. I then called a few more times the following two weeks, and always received the same response. In the month that followed, I called every single day during my breakfast to check on the case and was always told that another department would respond.

After about two months of no responses, I wrote a certified letter to the CEO of Airbnb in San Francisco. Needless to say, I also did not receive a response. Almost three months later, I received the following email:

We apologize for the unusual amount of time it took for us to reply to your inquiry and wish to offer you support in the event that you are still having any troubles. At this time, your issue should be resolved – please take a moment to log into your account and ensure everything is correct. Once you login, you may be prompted to complete additional verifications on your account. If you still need assistance, please visit us at https://www.airbnb.com/help/contact_us.

Best regards, Airbnb

No explanation of any kind, Airbnb owes me several hundred Euros in payouts that they haven’t paid due to the account having been disabled. I immediately wrote Airbnb customer service to demand the funds. Within 24 hours, Airbnb responded that the matter had been transferred to another department. I called, only to be told that the same department that took almost three months to respond to the disabled account issue now will decide over the fate of my money. Sorry, but that’s not the way to treat people, that’s not the way to do business, and that’s not the way to treat the people that earn money for you.

I have lost tons of money because of this. There have been no guest for three months. All the while I have to pay for taxes, cleaning personnel, and security. There have to be dozens or even hundreds of other hosts out there that have similar stories. And while it is nice and fine to vent here on Airbnb Hell I think that Airbnb needs to reap the consequences of their (maybe even illegal) actions.

Airbnb Customer Service is an Utter Disgrace

Posted on May 25, 2017

This company needs to be sorted out. They are an absolute disgrace. They have blocked my account – also those of people I know – without giving any reason whatsoever. They are disrespectful and unprofessional. I am actively boycotting them and encourage everyone to do the same. Here was a message I received from Airbnb customer service:

Hi Jon,

Thanks for reaching out. As previously mentioned, we regret to inform you that we’ll be unable to support your account moving forward, and have exercised our discretion under our Terms of Service to disable your account(s). This decision is irreversible and will affect any duplicated or future accounts. Please understand that we are not obligated to provide an explanation for the action taken against your account. Furthermore, we are not liable to you in any way with respect to disabling or canceling your account. Airbnb reserves the right to make the final determination with respect to such matters, and this decision will not be reversed. We’ll contact you if anything changes in the future, but until then, we won’t be able to assist you any further with your account issues. Please see our Help Center for further information.

Thanks, Alex.

And my response:

Dear Alex,

First of all, please refer to me as Mr. ___. I certainly do not know you and I expect to be respected. How on earth can you possibly think this is the correct etiquette in business and moreover, customer service? I will do my utmost to pass onto everyone I know to boycott your company as you are unwilling to provide an answer to my questions. There are many more companies that provide the same service as you do, that are of no concern to me. But I will be contacting the ombudsman and also look into contacting the CEO of Airbnb. This situation cannot be accepted and I will not tolerate such unprofessionalism and disrespect.

Airbnb Account was Terminated, No Place to Stay

Posted on May 4, 2017

I joined Airbnb because my sister had good experiences with them. I entered all my information and scanned in my passport. I made a reservation to stay at a flat in Paris. The reservation was accepted and the payment came out of my account. Two days later I received an email from response@airbnb.com:

Mr. Horihan,

Thank you for uploading your ID for our ID Verification process. Upon review, and given information uncovered pursuant to online public records, we have determined that it is in the best interest of Airbnb, and for the users on our site, to deactivate your account permanently. We realize that this may come as a disappointment and that you may have questions regarding this determination. We hope you understand that this decision is exercised at our sole discretion and that we are not obligated to provide an explanation as to the action taken against your account, nor are we liable to a user in any way with respect to deactivating or canceling his or her account. Should you choose to dispute the decision, please submit any documents you think may be relevant to us, at no additional cost to Airbnb. We will forward those documents to our Legal Department for review before any decision regarding reinstatement of your account can be made. Additionally, please understand that this removal will also entail the immediate termination of your pending or accepted bookings. As such, we have communicated to your host that your reservation has been cancelled and refunded in full. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.

I could no longer log into my account. I called Airbnb several times. Every time they claimed the issue would be escalated and I would get a response shortly. To this day, there has been no response from “higher up” and no refund (as the email suggests refunds of both pending and accepted bookings). I was not able to communicate with the host of the accepted booking through Airbnb. I could not log in to sent her a message.

Five days before my booking the host contacted me through @host.airbnb.com. From her message it seemed she had no idea my account was terminated. She was still expecting me in Paris, so I responded with a nice message stating what time of day I’ll arrive. I also questioned her if she heard anything from Airbnb the reservation being cancelled. I received no response. I continued calling and emailing Airbnb to sort things out and get in contact with the host. They only replied by sending me the same email as shown above two more times.

I arrived in Paris. There was still no confirmed response from the host through the @host.airbnb.com email she was using. I knocked on the gate to the flat. It seemed like nobody was there. I never received a reservation reminder prior to the check in date. My sister said that she gets a reminder email every time she books through Airbnb. My sister and I both assumed that the reservation had actually been cancelled and I would likely get my refund as their email stated. I ended up getting a hotel room for the five days instead.

It’s now well over a month since they charged my card. I’ve contacted them several more times by phone. It seems the only way to get the refund would be a lawsuit. They are completely denying that their system messed up. They try to tell me: “No,  bookings actually accepted do not get refunded.” The emails they sent me on three different occasions is a lie. There is absolutely no reason why a company like this would terminate my account “given information uncovered pursuant to online public records.” I have no criminal record. There is nothing bad online about me. I travel the world all the time completely trouble free. They lost a good customer and they’ve lost many more because I’ve shared my experience with others. The existence of a website called Airbnb Hell is proof that Airbnb is a poorly run company with questionable business ethics.

Thrown Off Airbnb After 6 Years, 728 stays, and 400 Five-Star Reviews

Posted on March 2, 2017

After six years it saddens me to say we were thrown off Airbnb without even a phone call -just a email and all future bookings refunded to the guests. We were erased like we never even existed. They say we broke the rules of not allowing four single men to rent our two bedroom with just two beds. After a phone call they said they planned to have girls over, which would have brought the total to eight people in my two bedroom. I am not anti-gay or anti-lesbian. We just had a great gay couple weeks prior to this and none of this matters to me. What matters to me is fitting double the occupancy for my apartment. When you have this many people coming through our place you’re bound to have a few arguments with people. I’m not saying we are angels; we have had to straighten out some people trying to damage our property.

Here in Medellin, Colombia things can crazy with our renters partying too hard. On top of all this, in September Airbnb renters had a underage girl in our apartment. Someone called the police and they came at 1:00 AM. The renters were rude to the police. They found the girl and kicked all of them out and then sealed our building. It took two weeks and $8,000 to remedy. To this, Airbnb said they were sorry. No financial help. No million dollar policy they claim in ads is available to help. We were left with the bill. We swallowed hard, paid it, and opened back up. Now we have been removed? It’s the silliest thing I ever heard. We have done nothing wrong accept say no to a booking which included four men and four more on the way to stay there. Above is a picture of the guy opening the door to a slew of police. Six years and many happy clients are gone in a blink of a eye. Try to talk to Airbnb about it: you can’t. They are the Microsoft of the industry and we will hurt because of it.

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