Throughout the entire process Airbnb, basically has kept repeating that the host committed no violations so they can't help us. I don't fault the airbnb host for the stolen key, but I do find it fairly unreasonable for us to pay the full cost of this, when the larger problem exposed was the host has no backup plan.
Has anyone dealt with a situation with like this? Am I out of luck because we bothered to help rekey the hosts unit and we should have simply left it unsecured after we got in? Do I have other avenues I should consider outside of Airbnb and the host to get some assistance?
Pretty at a loss for what I'm supposed to do, I just keep getting passed from team to team on the Airbnb support side hearing the same things. Is this just a known risk with Airbnb that you're completely on your own if things go wrong and I was just too naive to count on anyone to help?
Also what would have happened if we weren't fortunate enough to be able to pay for this in the first place? Would we just be out on the streets?
What took over 5 weeks of back and forth was resolved in 2 hours. Airbnb even gave me $100 credit for my trouble...
I booked a place in a major city, but the queen bed turned out to be a twin bed. We complained, and at midnight they told us that the host wanted us gone. We booked an emergency hotel, and the next day AirBnB only offered to rebook us in a place with the same cost. Of course, the only place was 60 miles outside the city we were visiting, but they didn't care. I wound up staying in hotels for that trip.
It took two months of badgering support to reimburse us for the AirBnB and the last-minute hotel bookings. The whole time it was clear that Airbnb support's top priority was getting us to leave them alone and trying to keep as much money as possible. What a terrible experience.
I will never use Airbnb in major cities ever again. If anything goes wrong, they are completely uninterested in fixing it.
One time the person literally changed location on us to a poorer option and to add insult to injury it clearly had not been cleaned, hair inside the bed sheets type stuff and uncleaned bathroom etc.
Tried to contact AirBNB about instant cancel so we could head to a hotel and nothing. Again tried after the stay as we shouldn't have to pay same rate for a downgrade and nothing both times.
Personally I'm hotels now if traveling solo. Far less problems, better quality and the price is much the same. I use another Australia only based equivalent for houses if doing a group thing and they have always been great.
If I was the host I would make sure I have someone trusted who has another key for situations like this, and if I didn't, I'd want to at least choose a locksmith. How do I know the locksmith didn't just put in the cheapest - lowest security - lock they had, and once I return I need to pay to have it replaced again?
> Also what would have happened if we weren't fortunate enough to be able to pay for this in the first place? Would we just be out on the streets?
Probably yes. If your baggage was lost on the flight the aircraft may reimburse you, but you'd still need to buy everything yourself first - they aren't going to give you a wad of cash to start spending.
> Also what would have happened if we weren't fortunate enough to be able to pay for this in the first place? Would we just be out on the streets?
You would go to your home's country embassy and explain the situation? Having your passport/luggage locked in the Airbnb isn't different from having it stolen on a train or something like that. This unfortunately could happen to travelers whether they're staying at a hotel or an Airbnb. At least you had your phone and means of payment available, and were able to recover the documents/luggage after some time.
I wonder what help Airbnb provides if the situation is flipped: let's say the owner has to change the locks for $750 because the renter never returned the key. Is the owner eating that cost?
In your situation, you're the party who lost the keys. Maybe Airbnb rental terms should have a clear cost for lost keys situation, $1k for this is steep!
But that's not the point.. point is that Airbnb forbid me to publish photos from the apartment.. so, next time you see nice looking photos, also keep in mind that content is censored to benefit middleman..
My uncle is a super host/spicy landloard and might have more stories. I will ask him when I next see him.