Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Majority of Airbnb applicatio­ns don’t meet NYC rules

- NATALIE LUNG

New York City has had to return a “vast majority” of applicatio­ns from Airbnb Inc. and other short-term rental hosts seeking to register their listings because they were illegal, prompting many hosts to list their property for longer-term stays.

New laws went into effect last month requiring all hosts offering lodging for fewer than 30 days to apply for a license to operate in New York, to ensure they comply with the city’s strict housing rules.

The city has received 4,794 applicatio­ns as of Oct. 9 and has reviewed 1,697 of them. Of those, 57% have been returned to hosts to provide additional informatio­n or to correct deficienci­es, said Christian Klossner, executive director of New York’s Office of Special Enforcemen­t, which regulates short-term rentals. The agency has granted licenses to only 481 applicants, or 28%, who meet the occupancy regulation­s and building codes that prohibit rentals in most apartments for fewer than 30 days without a tenant present.

“People are still sending us applicatio­ns for an entire home with six people or illegal basement apartments, or listings that make clear that they’re not going to be there,” Klossner said in an interview. It “has taken a lot of one-on-one education” with hosts so they can come into compliance, he said.

The difficulty of the approval process reveals the effects of regulation­s in New York, which had once been one of Airbnb’s biggest domestic markets. As of late September, listings available for booking for fewer than 30 days fell 89% compared with early August, to 2,322, according to market analytics firm AirDNA.

Airbnb has fought with the city for years over regulation­s. Critics say the platform has led to higher rents and limited availabili­ty in a notoriousl­y tight real estate market, while many hosts argue that they need the extra income to help pay mortgages. By the time the enforcemen­t kicked in in September, the company said New York only accounted for about 1% of its annual revenue.

Many Airbnb hosts have switched from offering stays of a few days or weeks, to longer-term leases with a 30-day minimum, which excludes them from needing to apply for a license. Those rentals, which are largely unregulate­d, now account for 94% of all of

Airbnb’s listings in New York, up from 54% in early August, according to AirDNA.

The city’s work with the rental platforms has resulted in “strong compliance, and a massive reduction in illegal shortterm rental listings,” Klossner said. Airbnb said it has worked closely with OSE staff by connecting to their verificati­on system, which flags unregister­ed listings and prevents listings that fail the city’s verificati­on from hosting short-term stays.

The city has long argued that more than half of what Airbnb earned in New York was derived from illegal listings. The registrati­on requiremen­t aims to hold platforms like Airbnb, Expedia Group Inc.’s Vrbo and Booking Holdings Inc. accountabl­e and prevents them from profiting from non-registered units by blocking financial transactio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States