Herald on Sunday

‘Booze up the walls and vomit’

One in seven Airbnb hosts say they find damage or theft from unruly guests

- Tom Dillane

Vomit covered walls, glass encrusted carpet, stolen family heirlooms — the horror stories of slovenly or downright criminal Airbnb tenants are well publicised when they occur.

But how likely are you to actually suffer property damage or theft as an Airbnb host?

According to a survey by AA Insurance, one in seven hosts report some form of damage to, or theft from, their property over their leasing journey.

But this relatively high incidence, in a small sample size of 77, did not discourage the hosts from continuing to rent their properties.

Of those hosts who experience­d damage or theft, four out of five said they planned on having more guests over the next six months.

Jeremy Craw is one such Airbnb host who hit the headlines in June after his Dunedin property was visited by more than 100 young teenagers holding a boozy party.

After one of Craw’s Kaikorai neighbours alerted him to the rager, he called police to break it up and discovered the person who had rented his property was 14 years old.

Craw says while there was not major damage to his property, the incident was a wake-up call.

“I’ve definitely made some changes to my check-in process. I now meet any first-time Airbnb user, anyone with no feedback, on arrival,” he said.

Craw made no insurance claim following the June 16 teen party because the aftermath was “mainly just mess” consisting of glass, vomit, and “booze splashed up on the walls”.

The renter’s father paid for profession­al cleaning and he says most of his Airbnb experience has been positive.

Airbnb strongly disputes the AA Insurance property damage and theft survey numbers.

Citing their own Host Protection Insurance programme, Airbnb says of the 49 million trips at Airbnb listings worldwide last year, significan­t property damage was reported only 0.001 per cent of the time.

“Based on 2017 data you could host a new reservatio­n every single day for over 63 years without expecting to file a significan­t property damage claim under our Host Guarantee,” an Airbnb spokespers­on said.

Claims of “significan­t property damage” made under Airbnb’s Host Protection Insurance programme were those over $1000.

The AA Insurance survey also found only six in 10 Airbnb hosts had informed an insurer of a vacation rental property.

Airbnb said there had been more than 400 million guest arrivals on their listings worldwide and negative incidents were extremely rare.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand