Parties and events are now banned at all Airbnb-listed properties, the company announced Tuesday.
The move is a continued crackdown on what the company calls “party houses,” or ”listings that create persistent neighborhood nuisance.” The ban was first implemented in August 2020 and was in effect at the time until further notice. The company made the move permanent Tuesday.
Since the ban, Airbnb said it has seen a 44 percent year-over-year decrease in party reports at listings around the globe. Party nuisance reports in Tennessee dropped 68 percent in that same time period.
Tighter restrictions on parties began in 2019, when Airbnb banned open-invite parties, those advertised on social media, and “chronic house parties,” those that had developed into neighborhood nuisances. The platform also opened a new hotline for neighbors who could report these parties directly to Airbnb.
“When the pandemic hit, as many bars and clubs closed or restricted their occupancy, we began to see some people taking partying behavior to rented homes, including through Airbnb,” reads a statement from Airbnb. “This was concerning to us due to both the disruptive nature of unauthorized parties and the risk of such gatherings spreading the virus. As such, we announced the party ban to our community as being ‘in the best interest of public health.’”
“Over time, the party ban became much more than a public health measure. It developed into a bedrock community policy to support our hosts and their neighbors.”
The 2020 temporary ban included a cap on occupancy at 16 people. This policy has been lifted for large properties that can comfortably house 16 people, such as “castles in Europe to vineyards in the U.S. to large beachfront villas in the Caribbean.” But the occupancy cap remains for smaller properties listed on the platform.
“We also understand that 16 is not a magic number, and issues can occur with groups of any size,” Airbnb said in 2020. “To be clear, we are not sanctioning smaller gatherings with this policy and all community members are expected to comply with local health restrictions on gatherings.”
The 2020 rules also included a manual review of “high-risk reservations,” and restrictions on allowing guests under the age of 25 without a history of positive reviews to book entire home listings locally. These rules still apply, especially on holidays.
This comes as we’ve introduced strict anti-party measures for the upcoming 4th of July weekend, where guests without a history of positive reviews on Airbnb will be prohibited from making one-night reservations in entire home listings,” reads a statement from Airbnb. “We saw success with this initiative during both the 4th of July 2021 and the past Memorial Day 2022.”
Hosts and other guests who attempt to skirt Airbnb’s new party rules face bans from using Airbnb in the future, as well as legal action.