Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
I stay at Hampton Inns regularly. They've had routine daily cleaning for at least the last 12 months. You can request not to have daily maid service.
Otherwise you get daily maid service. They'll change your sheets daily if you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We own a house that we rent through AirBnB and through the resort where the house is located. There is a cleaning fee and the only thing we ask or the HOA asks is that the trash is put out and that the beds are stripped. Is that too much cleaning? We've only owned the place a year and we were booked all summer and we have a fair amount of reservations for the fall/winter. The place is only 3 hours away so we use it a few times during the winter and a bit in the summer too.
For us it depends on the type of trip we are taking. For our ski trips, we prefer a place with a kitchen. There is no need to go out for breakfast every day. We usually do ski in/out so we even go back for lunch some days. When we travel to a city we usually prefer a hotel. When we are doing a family vacation, we do an AirBnB for the convenience with the munchkin.
So here's the thing - if you're really asking. If you're charging me a cleaning fee, presumably someone is coming in and cleaning right? So why am I taking out the trash? Why am I stripping the beds, running the dishwasher, putting towels in the washer, etc.? I mean - I'm on vacation. It got to be too much. And then I'd go in and half the time they weren't ready for me on check in time, and the "cleaning" wasn't done and now I have to go around and spot clean to feel comfortable.
Not to mention the extra fees, and the cameras. Oh the cameras! So anytime I'm in a "common" (very loosely defined) area, you have a camera watching me and recording all my conversations. It's very weird and uncomfortable for me.
I used to use them all the time - they were cheaper and nicer and I liked the kitchen option. I've since started renting hotel rooms with a kitchenette. No more exorbitant fees and cheaper.
I'm sorry but the cleaning companies set the prices and I can guarantee you our cleaners are much more thorough then any hotel one. We require you to leave used towels and beds out so they know which to replace. As for trash we never make guests take it out. Dishes we just say run the last load. We also never have issues w/ checkin/checkout since we've contracted a turnaround time. you might have gotten by bad airbnb hosts. Also the reviews really make sure that we do the best for our guests where as a hotel they don't do anything because you can't individually review them.
Um, hotels switch out everything instead of trying to guess what has been used
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
Where are these hotels not offering cleaning services? I’ve travelled at ton since Covid (but mostly to FL so maybe that’s why) and we’ve had no issues with hotel housekeeping. The only trip it wasn’t offered was our first trip spring break of 2021 and even then we receive a restock of anything we wanted just by texting the front desk. Every trip since then (at least 4-5 more) were full daily housekeeping.
Florida was over with Covid restrictions/limitations after 4 months. Most hotels in big cities were not. Hell, the Hyatt Regency I stayed at in New Jersey last weekend is still requiring masks be worn in elevators and no more than 4 people ride at a time. Ridiculous
I was just in New Orleans at a top hotel and they didn't provide cleaning during your stay, just before and after. We were there for 5 nights, so it would have been nice to get fresh stuff and the trash taken out. At least they didn't charge me $180 for cleaning like all the dumb air BnBs
Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hotel has one or two people managing hundreds of rooms vs a host per house on Airbnb. Totally different , hotels treat you like a number not good
Disagree. I love being able to go to the reception desk, day or night, with a problem. I stay in higher end hotels where the staff are extremely helpful and eager to troubleshoot. Compare this to an Airbnb host, who might respond to your text when they get around to it, and there is no comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread sponsored by the hotelliers of America trade group.
I was starting to get sucked in, but: Yeah, you're obviously right.
No way would a thread like this attract so many comments so quickly if sock puppeting weren't involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Airbnbust Is Upon Us
https://www.reddit.com/r/WhitePeopleTwitter/comments/ye9l5r/good/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf
I love this comment:
I’m reading this thread from a Marriott right now. Tomorrow I get to walk out the door without scrubbing the floors and reroofing the house or whatever the hell.
Anonymous wrote:The Airbnbust Is Upon Us
https://www.reddit.com/r/WhitePeopleTwitter/comments/ye9l5r/good/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
Where are these hotels not offering cleaning services? I’ve travelled at ton since Covid (but mostly to FL so maybe that’s why) and we’ve had no issues with hotel housekeeping. The only trip it wasn’t offered was our first trip spring break of 2021 and even then we receive a restock of anything we wanted just by texting the front desk. Every trip since then (at least 4-5 more) were full daily housekeeping.
Florida was over with Covid restrictions/limitations after 4 months. Most hotels in big cities were not. Hell, the Hyatt Regency I stayed at in New Jersey last weekend is still requiring masks be worn in elevators and no more than 4 people ride at a time. Ridiculous
I was just in New Orleans at a top hotel and they didn't provide cleaning during your stay, just before and after. We were there for 5 nights, so it would have been nice to get fresh stuff and the trash taken out. At least they didn't charge me $180 for cleaning like all the dumb air BnBs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
Where are these hotels not offering cleaning services? I’ve travelled at ton since Covid (but mostly to FL so maybe that’s why) and we’ve had no issues with hotel housekeeping. The only trip it wasn’t offered was our first trip spring break of 2021 and even then we receive a restock of anything we wanted just by texting the front desk. Every trip since then (at least 4-5 more) were full daily housekeeping.
Florida was over with Covid restrictions/limitations after 4 months. Most hotels in big cities were not. Hell, the Hyatt Regency I stayed at in New Jersey last weekend is still requiring masks be worn in elevators and no more than 4 people ride at a time. Ridiculous
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
Where are these hotels not offering cleaning services? I’ve travelled at ton since Covid (but mostly to FL so maybe that’s why) and we’ve had no issues with hotel housekeeping. The only trip it wasn’t offered was our first trip spring break of 2021 and even then we receive a restock of anything we wanted just by texting the front desk. Every trip since then (at least 4-5 more) were full daily housekeeping.
Anonymous wrote:Last spring break, I brought my family to an AirBNB in France. The owner didn't give me info on how to get in until way too late and I was stuck across from the AirBNB trying to figure out how to unlock the door with two kids, tons of luggage, and no internet signal in a foreign country.
It was such a nightmare that I'm staying in a hotel in London this time. Getting off a red eye and then being stuck in a strange city with no where to put my luggage is just too much. Nope.
That said, I will probably stay in AirBNBs again, just not right after getting off a red eye.
I will say that with hotels offering so few cleaning services mid-trip the differences between the two options are becoming fewer and fewer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Airbnb has taken a total nosedive. They might as well be hotels for the way they’re charging. I almost just booked a pet-friendly cabin that slept 6 only to have the host tell me there was a $100 pet fee (fine, but that’s not mentioned anywhere in the listing) AND a $50 fee for each guest over 4 even though the house sleeps 6. Why am I paying to actually have people in the house? Isn’t that the point of setting the nightly rate in the first place?
All hotels charfe pet fees and excessive occupancy.