Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Airbnb and owner disagree on Hawaiian rental refund

- By Christophe­r Elliott

Q: Last spring, I made an Airbnb reservatio­n for a vacation rental in Lanai, Hawaii, in November 2020. Because of the COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns, I canceled the reservatio­n in May.

Airbnb denied me a full refund. I attempted to phone Airbnb to discuss this denial, but the hold time was consistent­ly over two hours. Feeling I had no other recourse, I disputed the claim with Capital One, my credit card company, and was given a conditiona­l refund.

Capital One sided with Airbnb a month later and urged me to resolve this directly with Airbnb. I attempted to do so. I applied for a refund online and was told that, due to the vacation rental’s refund policy, there would be no refund.

I called the owner, and she said that she does not have a record of my reservatio­n, nor does she have any money from me for my reservatio­n. She also has no policy that would have denied me a refund.

I contacted Airbnb with this informatio­n. A representa­tive promised to call the owner and get back to me. Although she didn’t call back, I received a notificati­on from my credit card issuer that a refund of $282 had been issued to my credit card. But I never received it. Can you help me get my money back? — Carl Baeuerlen, Los Altos, California

A: You should be able to get a full refund. But your case is a little complicate­d. Let’s see if we can unpack it.

Airbnb had an “extenuatin­g circumstan­ces” policy that allowed guests to cancel reservatio­ns for stays made on or before March 14, 2020, with check-in dates between March 14, 2020, and April 14, 2020. But you were outside of that window.

That means the Airbnb extenuatin­g circumstan­ces policy didn’t apply to your rental in Lanai. But here’s where things get interestin­g. Airbnb claims your rental wasn’t refundable, but the owner says there was no such policy. So who is right? I’ll get to the answer in a moment.

You ran out of patience and filed a credit card dispute. In credit card parlance, that’s called a friendly dispute because you were doing business with Airbnb. And your bank sided with Airbnb, which further complicate­d your case.

A brief, polite email to one of Airbnb’s executives might have helped. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of Airbnb’s top customer service managers on my website at elliott.org/company-contacts/airbnb.

So whose policy should prevail: the owner’s or Airbnb’s? I think the rules to which you agree are the rules that bind you. But those weren’t the rules to which the owner agreed, so you have some wiggle room. I’m unhappy that the owner never received your deposit. That suggests Airbnb simply pocketed your deposit. I guess that’s how Airbnb justifies its $80 billion valuation.

Given the fact that Airbnb had already promised a refund, I think the process should have been pretty straightfo­rward. I contacted Airbnb on your behalf, and you received your $282 deposit back.

Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Elliott’s latest book is “How To Be The World’s Smartest Traveler” (National Geographic). Contact him at elliott.org/ help or chris@elliott.org.

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