Anonymous wrote:A relative who worked at a hotel chain always tended to stay at the Hampton Inn/ Hyatt place level properties, and when I asked why they said it was because they have so many more people staying they get cleaned and remodeled more consistently, and are actually a better experience. I’ve found this to be true. I’d rather be pleasantly surprised by the clean, inexpensive room with free parking than disappointed by the $400 room that I have to pay for breakfast and valet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've had a couple of very bad Airbnb experiences though that just rarely happen in hotels. In France we had a host who had forgotten they had new people coming in (we had to wait hours for a changeover and to be let in). Another in Hawaii, we had a family walk into our beach condo during the middle of the afternoon because the host had given them the info for the incorrect unit (they managed 3 in the same building).
This has happened to me in a hotel as well. I have had people walk into my room, and I've been given a key to an occupied room.
Yup and hotel staff are like woops sorry not my fault talk to Corp, where as Airbnb you are like host You're fault make it right
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like an AirBnB ad.
Anonymous wrote:Leaving an honest (critical) review for an Airbnb is almost impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relative who worked at a hotel chain always tended to stay at the Hampton Inn/ Hyatt place level properties, and when I asked why they said it was because they have so many more people staying they get cleaned and remodeled more consistently, and are actually a better experience. I’ve found this to be true. I’d rather be pleasantly surprised by the clean, inexpensive room with free parking than disappointed by the $400 room that I have to pay for breakfast and valet
I agree. We have to budget for travel, but these places usually provide a decent room with breakfast and parking included.
Anonymous wrote:This describes Marriott to a t
https://viewfromthewing.com/review-the-1-7-star-worst-marriott-hotel-in-north-america/
Anonymous wrote:On Airbnb if the host doesn't rate you, your review isn't published. I had a broken fridge for a stay and had to throw out all food, along with the air mattress listed as a bed having a hole in it. The host offered to get me ice after it had been warm for hours and no other rectification and then never rated me so my review wasn't published. For a hotel you can review on trip advisor, multiple sites like booking.com, hotels.com and yelp. Not sure why you think Airbnb some sort of honesty review rate when the host can control not publishing when they know there were issues.
Anonymous wrote:A relative who worked at a hotel chain always tended to stay at the Hampton Inn/ Hyatt place level properties, and when I asked why they said it was because they have so many more people staying they get cleaned and remodeled more consistently, and are actually a better experience. I’ve found this to be true. I’d rather be pleasantly surprised by the clean, inexpensive room with free parking than disappointed by the $400 room that I have to pay for breakfast and valet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know far too many people who have been robbed at their Airbnb that I’ve decided to never use an Airbnb again.
Going to need some data on this
My friend K and his wife had jewelry and a laptop stolen at their Airbnb in Seattle in a good building in a good neighborhood.
My friend J and his family were asleep in their luxury villa airbnb in Mexico when it was broken into. Wallets, purses, and cell phones were stolen.
I live in Seattle in a meh SFh neighborhood next to a fancy SFH neighborhood. My fancy neighbors have way more break-ins and home invasions.
Any multi family building in Seattle is going to have break ins in any neighborhood, full stop. Seattle has unique conditions that make property crime more likely than elsewhere, and anywhere zoned for multi family housing is especially susceptible.