“Rumours of my death have been greatly exaggerated”... Hey guys, John here - good to be back! Sorry for the wait. I’ve been working on multiple videos at the same time the last couple of months, but that means I should have a couple more long documentaries ready for you very soon. And I figured a good one to start with was the crazy story of Airbnb… hope you enjoy! 😁 Also, a huge thanks to Brilliant for sponsoring - you can try it for FREE at brilliant.org/magnates - Brilliant make learning much more fun and interactive, and you can learn some genuinely really useful skills on there. You can test it out for free with the link above, and it helps support this channel too :) 🤑 The BEST Way To Make Money From RUclips: magnatesmedia.com
AirBNB was a great thing when people were renting out their own homes on a part-time basis. Once investors began buying up multiple properties for the purpose of being full-time short-term rental properties, it was disastrous for communities.
Sadly that's the problem with pretty much every new ideas and businesses. It starts as something better, more convenient, hip and different from the rest of the corporate world or even against it which attracts people because people are tired of the same corporate models until the big investors come in when they see there is money in it and they make it basically a copy of the rest of the corporate world. Even RUclips became something that works in favor of big corporations, advertisers and mainstream media instead being for the people and alternative to the mainstream media as it was created for. The problem is there is never a balance, ideas are needed and investors are needed to sponsor these ideas, but after some time the balance is always broken and becoming another corporate machine.
It can be fixed by applying a limit quota based on how the property cost has increased. Also double check down to detect greedy investor with 10 properties or more.
Those "but AirBnb used to be good" posts fail or do not want to see the point. AirBnb would never become a large company or even survive if not for industrial scale owners mopping up properties and providing a massive supply of beds. It was part of the plan all the way. Contrariously to their PR babble, it would have been extremely easy and simple to block professional renters from the platform but they won't do it until authorities are able to enforce such bans. The "homesharing" crap has always been a stunt to make "conscious" hipsters more happy to consume their product.
@@toreadoress wel if people can make money off of youtube then airbnb aint so bad, atleast airbnb give room which is tangoble but youtube just makes you waste your time of boredom
It’s crazy how a company can become worth $100 Billion in Market Cap alone while hardly reporting a real profit. Their owners & founders are worth more money on paper than their company has actually made! Wow!
I've lived in Istanbul as an expat for 18 years. I've lost two apartments to Airbnb. I"m holding onto my present place until I can figure out if I have to leave the country, also thanks to Airbnb. The two guys who couldn't pay their rent have created this nightmare for many others. Here, rents have skyrocketed. Because of economic unrest, the dollar has multiplied many times in value. So we have more tourists than ever before. Professional Airbnb hosts rent the apartments for many times what normal people can pay, do all the repairs, and then rent out the place for Airbnb. The landlords love this. But our courts are backed up for two years, with all the evictions. Many people I know are being evicted. Most nice places are off the normal market now, all bought or rented up by Airbnb people. This is forcing Turkish residents farther and farther from the center of the city. Thriving, close-knit neighborhoods lose their local businesses to souvenir shops and cafes, the place fills up with strangers. If you live in an Airbnb building, your days are numbered. The Airbnb people don't give a damn about noise, trash or anything else. The worst ones are those who turn up their noses at a nice little hotel, rent an Airbnb, and blithely think they're experiencing "the real Istanbul" without realizing they are helping to destroy it.
I appreciate this. I love the couple who does the Our Freedom Years RUclips channel, but they didn’t mention or seem aware of this in their videos about Istanbul. I plan to start a long term journey around the world late next year and would love to travel in a better way. Is there any way to see local hotels that might be a better choice? Like in China and the Middle East, there are sites that locals use to find these kinds of places. Is there a travel site that most locals use to book stays?
I m a woman with money - never ever would i even think to rent from airbnb. 4 stars hotel not lower. People who can not afford a 4 stars hotel and higher want to travel too u know, and maybe they do not trust 2-3 stars hotel quality.
@@abbyabroad i do not know how about now with all those russian refugees trying escape the mobilization and invading turkey, but before hotels in turkey were very affordable and all right quality even the cheaper ones so i heard.
Just to clarify, Airbnb chooses 'not to be profitable' so they dont need to pay taxes. Uber "surprisingly" also doesn't make any money... millions people using the app, working countless hours with an app taking a cut from every transaction.... And not 'profitable' so don't need to pay tax?? Well played accountants, well played.
But the property owners in the houses in the neighborhoods who live in their houses do and their taxes have been raised. Where I live, Airbnbs have a their own special police department paid for by sales of drugs. So the city and police are essentially promoting drugs in their flyers they tell neighborhood safety groups they need to pass out (which most don't, since the reason the groups started was drugs and shootings from Airbnbs, some activity right next to school playgrounds), and if there's a problem at an Airbnb, the neighbors, even those harmed by the drug activity, have to call on people paid by drug activity for help, which they don't. Help, that is. They live in other cities, not the one in which they work. This is in a "really good city" with $$, so it's weird to be told by the city, people who live in the rich areas, not the middle class, like most of us, we must allow the drugs and drug money, in order to get help when there's crime from Airbnb guests and that our property taxes will be going up, because there's more to take care of, now.
Sometimes I watch your videos not because am interested in the topic but because it feels like a movie and just 30 seconds in am hooked already. Great storytelling and editing.
Airbnb could be out of of business as aspiring homeowners and renters get frustrated that there is no available long term housing in their area. My city banned it and nearly all neighboring cities either banned it or put restrictions on it. Not to mention, pressure from hotel owners will lobby to ban Airbnb.
I’m curious as to how many listings come from properties bought specifically for Airbnb. If Airbnb wanted to solve this, they could potentially have a limit of one property per host. I think they would lose a lot of money though
they need to be shutdown, since it'll take having every city they're in change their laws. I live in a small border beach town, population of 30k. at any given time, there's MAYBE 2-4 long term rentals available. the housing market as a whole needs an overhaul.
I just came back from a two-month trip to South America, so stayed at plenty of Airbnb. Unfortunately it is no longer a platform where people welcome travelers into their homes. A lot “hosts” are real estate companies that only care about the bottom line. You run into issues you won’t normally find in a hotel such as loud construction in the building, “amenities” the host listed don’t work, cockroaches, no heater in cold weather, etc. In some countries such as Colombia, hotels are better values than Airbnb after all the various “fees” the platform and host charge.
It was my first time stayed in Airbnb in this October when I returned to Mississauga Ontario; unfortunately, I was scammed by the Airbnb host and guest, they set me up and booked a room under my account . When I realized that it was a scam and I reported this accident to Airbnb support team, but nobody were able to help me to get my money back. Ever since then I've lost my trust and confidence with Airbnb and have promised myself would never ever stay in Airbnb anymore!!!
I really don't understand why landlords who decided to give up long term letting in favour of short term have been refunded, they made a decision but they didn't face the consequences. That said Airbnb is a really useful service but at the same time the reduction in long term rents is a major problem, I am curious to see how it will be solved
Brisbane city council has said to home owners if they’re with air bnb their yearly rates for services will double, the rental market is so tight because of air bnb .
Personally speaking I don’t use Airbnb because by the time you add all the fees and taxes, you’ll be paying the cost of a 5 star hotel. So that $100/night room ends up being $200/night after fees and taxes. No thanks.
Airbnb doesn't risk anything, they don't own the buildings, they don't have mortgages to pay, they only take a fee for renting space in your house. You take all the risk
I cant believe i only just discovered this channel. Im literally addicted. Ive listened to about 5 videos whilst at work today. Absolutely insane quality and story telling
It's a shame. Air B&B was such a good idea at first. But the moment someone decided to rent out their house while they were away or use it for landlording it went to Hell.
Honestly, good on those guys for being willing to take financial hits to do the right thing. Not even as a PR move, but just because they knew they should.
In 2015 I stayed for a week in NY and I could only afford an Airbnb. The hotels I could find for the same price looked abandoned. For people on a budget Airbnb is great, cheaper than a hotel. It's no wonder why people choose them over hotels.
and for those who say the visitors ate noisy and don't contribute. I think that is a over genetalisation. Most visitors...short tennants...hotel stayers...tourists treat whwre they stay respectfully. People just remember those few who don't and extrapolate.
I've travelled a lot the last years pre covid, and I did check out Airbnd a few times. Never ever did it tempt me in any way. Almost same prices as hotels, no good breakfast buffet as almost every European hotel have, hotels are safer, most options far from city centers, and so on. The ONLY positive was it often had free parking, but that isn't expensive at hotels with a garage. So I've never used it, and never ever will. I'll stick with hotels, as I've always done.
I love the business idea . The thing is now they became so big they are not realising that people are not happy for the high prices and problems it has created. People are back on booking hotels and residents are paying the price of high rents .
As a regular user of AirBnB i will never use them again NEVER when i rented an apartment there was no one there and DERELICT Waited 2 hours and when i looked through the windows it was clear i was SCAMMED Trying to get a refund was CRAZY STUPID they asked did you take a picture of the locked door i told them i was miles away now in another hotel they refused a refund 2 years later i had the same thing happen in the UK and refused to give a refund again Motto of this story A company is only as good as their backup service You THINK a company is good until you need them to help you In this case totally useless and ripped off
As a former Airbnb host, they haven't improved their platform, they've just made it easier to protect themselves. In addition, with more Airbnb properties opening up, there are less options for affordable housing, driving up costs of property, creating a need to build more homes which no one lives in. This is especially disturbing since homelessness is on the rise. Not to mention the environmental cost to build these unnecessary properties. Also, guests treat your neighborhood like they treat you space, disposable, and if you haven't written the war and peace of house rules, you'll be responsible for the bill. I submitted a claim less than $300. It took 5 months of correspondence to get a partial payout because I did the repair myself. Since I didnt have a bill from a professional, since it was over Christmas, I wasn't reimbursed for the time and effort it took me to repair. Because I was an owner occupied property, I closed down my units immediately, while waiting for a resolution. I ultimately closed then down for good, because if they are going to give me a hard time over something so small, what would they do if I actually had a large claim.
lol my Airbnb host in new York tried to borrow money from me to pay for her tuition!! she claimed that I would be getting my money back because her bf was rich!! hahaha 😂 I was like, if you have a rich bf, get him to pay for your tuition
I'm from Berlin, Germany and Chapter 5 is 100% true. Reported 4 Landlords myself and one found out. He threatened me and I sued. I won, but I still lost. Because now, his family is "living" there renting out "extra rooms". In short: No one lives there and the whole flat is rented out.
I've used airbnb twice and only had good experiences. The first time was in New York in 2008, so it's quite fun to think that it was at their birth and I had no idea. This story is very well told, he always does this; making me think oh, this is so blissful, what could possibly go wrong? and then... the dark enters.
Airbnb is partially responsible for the rise of condos in the Philippines. The ordinary Filipino don't want to live in them. Mostly foreigners buy them initially since foreigners are not allowed to own land nor houses only condonimiums. Since hotels here are expensive and renting a house or apartment less than a month to few months isn't cost feasible, Filipinos are now buying condos to rent them out for Airbnb. This causes problems to actual residents of condos since these guests would go to condo pool that by default reserved for condo residents and occupy the restaurants in the ground floor.
This was really a good business idea except the tenants who started using their rented places to make money that was unethical, I also agree with locals who complained that this Airbnb took properties that are for long term rental away from them,and also they felt like they are foreigners in their own country that was really painful for those citizens.The part that touched me the most was the story of the lady whom her property was vandalised and her belongings were stolen what is worse was how her problem was handled by Airbnb.
The late 80's and early 90's before the internet was a tool for everyone, there used to be a monthly news letter called $20 or Less where cheap motels, motels offering a discount to subscribers or private property owners could list cheap rooms, a spare RV space or a campsite for short stays and such. It was great for me while I was traveling and working on the road. As a member any place I stayed at I could flip through their current newsletter, make some calls and arrange for another rental where ever I'm going to or just hand write down a potential of places to check out once I got there. I thought that was pretty novel, cool and a low key way to avoid boondocking or stealth camping. Yeah it didn't always work out. Some places were fleabags or a room or camper at a rundown house in the hood, no vacancy when I got there or no one there at all but I would just get a more expensive motel or just find a place to stealth camp in the area if that was the case. That news letter disappeared around 93.
Ok, the cereal thing has left me confused. So they took another company's product, removed it from the packaging and stuck it into their own packaging? How did they not get sued when this came to light? Reminds me of John Cusack's character in the movie "The Road to Wellville".
So sad for the host that had her house & valuables stolen & destroying. The response to that confused me though. Were the identities of the people not known? They should have been arrested & presecuted 🤷🏾♂️ . There should always be before & after images & videos for each occupancy for documentation & legal reasons ...
I blame AirBnB for the current accommodation crisis in country. Currently there are 3000 rentals available in an entire country of 5M people. There are 25,515 AirBnB listings.
I stayed in Airbnb a. Couple of times till last year with horrible experience. The studio we rented does not even have a lock on the door. Next day we found that there were bears around the neighborhood. This was near Yosemite national park usa. We checked out one day earlier. Airbnb refused to refund us and asking me for a photo of the door and a photo showing no hot water in the sink. So ridiculous, never again with Airbnb.
You sound like one of those guests that are better suited for a motel or even staying home... You are near a national park and surprised that there is wild life over there? 😂😂
Early potential investors probably didn’t invest because they were super wealthy themselves so could not see that they would rent one or rent out their house.
That's not how investors work lol they don't need to see use for something for themselves to invest and often don't (think of all the men and women in their 60's and 70's who invest in social media or invested) I doubt they are running to download the app once it becomes available... the bottom line is money
Kind of ironic that before I even start watching a video titled "The Dark Truth About Airbnb", I get shown an ad about Free Airbnb Case Studies on Airbnb business practices to make profits.
Among a lot of "sharing" economy models, Airbnb never made sense to me in particular. I mean, hotels and motels are subject to many regulations (health, fire, employment, etc.) I guess Airbnb is not subject to any of them in most places. How is that fair? Supporters may say "it is just like a short-term rental." Well, there are two problems with that: Renting out your property is also subject to some regulations, although often people are not aware of them. Is Airbnb subject to those? Also, Airbnb is clearly pitched as a sort of "hotel," not short-term rental (for which, there were already other websites). Why did politicians let this happen? (Campaign "donations" and other "contributions", I guess.) Uber has a similar problem. Also, I know at least one family who first put their spare room on Airbnb but later converted it to long-term rental because they realized it didn't make as much money as renting it out. So, beware.
Depends where you live. First month of owning a apartment, we rented it on airbnb for 4k euros(at that point almost 5k dollars). After that we moved to long term rent, 1200 a month. Take into account that monthly bill for airbnb was same as long term. Airbnb makes a lot of sense money wise if you have the time to clean and care. Long term, you sign the contract and next time you come is to get the keys back after a year or more.
Same reason they allowed the hire car company Uber to con them and destroy the taxi industry. They sold it as ride share, to appeal to the mindless young hip crowd. Nothing ride share about it. It is clearly a hire car company and so should have been subject to the same regulations as them. I can only think corrupt and stupid politicians allowed that exploitative, cancerous company to grow. Although it also makes massive losses.
What no one is talking about is how Airbnb has completely destroyed the home rental market. Good luck to young people and families who need to rent until they can buy a home, when almost all rental homes are rented by the day and way too expensive to rent annually. I mean, why would an owner want to rent a home out for $1500 a month, when they can charge $150 per day? Where I live, in 2016 you could rent a 3br, 2 bath home for $1200-1400 per month. Now, if you can even find one available, they rent for $2400 + And the only owners who don’t use Airbnb, refuse to use it because of the fear of the destruction of the property, and increased maintenance costs from higher numbers of guests. But most of them are on Airbnb and are not available for annual rental. Here in Florida, because of the travel based economy, I would like to see only beach front homes available on Airbnb.
Hardly reality. The overwhelming majority of great short term vacationnrentals are unaffordable and undesirable to that market. The best vacation rentals (beach, destination homes, second homes families use and rent anyway) are never good netry level rentals. that's just economics.
@@gextreme2381 you just don’t get it. I travel all over the country for work. I stay in Airbnbs everywhere. Hardly ever in vacation heavy areas. And there are airbnbs everywhere I go. And when we moved to Florida we did rent a house on the beach. Those houses used to be affordable. Now, if they aren’t on Airbnb, they are on VRBO and not available to young families. So some families definitely want to rent those properties in vacation areas, and used to actually be affordable. Everywhere I travel, I look at available annual rentals and there are far too few available for young families
It’s insane to me how a company can grow to that size, with that many employees, some of which earn millions per year in their roles, cannot turn a profit. Being someone who owns a business which is profitable, but absolutely minuscule in comparison, I just cannot understand it.
It's quite simple. The investors are only focusing on growth and growth expectation so the share prices keep rising and they can sell with a profit to the next on and so on, much like a pyramid scheme. Distributing profit means less investment for growth
Welcome to late capitalism. It simply became a cult. "investors" are so ideologically hellbent in creating a "new world" (that sounds dystopic to any decent person) that they are willing to perennially lose money backing companies such as AirBnb, Uber and Foodora. It doesn't make a difference to them because wealth concentration has never been so high, so the investors have basically infinite assets and it doesn't matter if they make bad decisions
@@fgui11 hey dude you answered it simple. I'm a newbie in this investment thing. So where can I start any books, videos, documentary any recommendations please
I wonder if he gon talk about the bad stuff about Airbnb especially now a days people posting certain pictures and it not even being the home listed .. peoples homes getting renting out without they knowledge 😕
If you rent any place out, you don’t leave anything to the rent cucks that stay there. You also make sure the guests don’t fuck up. Honestly, leaving your documents and grandma’s jewelry in a rented appartement is the worst you can do. My mother left a brass candle stand in our city apparent and the tenants stole it. Some people learn the hard way unfortunately.
Happen close to where I live, the place wasn't trashed but it was robbed, and they use the place to have massive all night loud parties. There was also some landlords who kicked out tenants and used rental places for Airbnb instead. So you don't need hotel unions to galvanize people, it's a horror show waiting to happen on its own.
The concept behind Airbnb is a good one in my opinion, I have used the service multiple times, unfortunately, with everything in this world, there are always going to be people who are greedy and try to take advantage of things at any cost. I don't feel terribly bad for the unethical hosts with multiple properties who didn't have bookings during the height of the pandemic, especially knowing that many of these type of hosts created a very unpleasant situation for renters. So many people lost jobs and where I live, and most didn't get any type of compensation. Like with everything, some honest hosts suffered loss, which is a byproduct of whenever things go bad.
I've stayed at pleasant Airbnb's and saved money. Nicely furnished, etc. I knew they probably had video surveillance which wasn't always comfortable...I wanted to report a couple because I heard crazy thumping coming from their basement but tried to go to the App and report - couldn't find a link to do it. I always left the places clean .
10:00 "That's a common theme amongst investors... They are often investing in the founders themselves." - John, 2022 Thanks for all your great work, John.
The founders saying they think it shouldn't have worked is like a chef saying he didn't expect his food to be edible. C'mon guys, you wouldn't engage in the act if you didn't have the slightest consideration for the fact that the project may succeed.
Your content and story telling is awesome. I never knew any of these background stories so these are actually eye openers for me and really entertaining as well. Can't imagine the case studying and work that was put into creating these videos. Well done.
I had all the same thoughts as the investors… until a few friends told me they used it and it was great. Then I tried it and found it way less weird than I expected but that’s changed of course. The last one I stayed in had a 3 page list on how to clean and wasn’t inexpensive. I’m happily back in hotels and motels.
Here in Wimbledon (UK), back in the 1970's, people living in large detached houses near the tennis tournament started renting out parking spaces on their frontages and drives. In some cases it escalated to offering their spare room and breakfast to visitors the following year. In one case, a family simply swapped. The visitors had accommodation a few minutes walk from the tennis, while the owners spent the two weeks relaxing in the south of France. With all the nanny state rules and insurance not covering paying visitors or their cars, over recent years the whole thing seems to have died out.
Air BnB has messed up the possible rental properties or properties that would be bought by a family. I live in the Helen Ga area and it's a small tourist town but the air BnB spread out into even the towns around Helen, up to 45 mins away. This area needs workers yet workers can't afford to live in the area because rent has skyrocketed since air BnB.
Watching every second of this video makes me wonder why the views don’t match the quality. Good work on this, it’s always great to watch an amazing story!
It does make sense that it would take away affordable housing for long term renters. Not being able to afford decent housing in the town you live is unacceptable. It gives landlords the opportunity to price gouge long term renters or make more money on short term rentals of the property.
AirBnB should be regulated so that private citizens can rent out a room or two and that’s it. No evicting a long term renter just so the landlord can rent it through AirBnB. No buying multiple properties just to short term rent them out. AirBnB is destroying areas that are already hurting economically. I refuse to have anything to do with AirBnB anywhere.
Amazing work John! Your videos are rich and full of so so so many lessons. Mad respect to the level of research, time and energy you’ve put into these. You deserve so much appreciation, abundance and prosperity coming your way!
Air bnb is so damaging to the apartment rental market that I cannot support it. Especially with current housing crisis’s we don’t need residences sitting vacant for tourists short term visits while locals struggle to find permanent housing. And you shouldn’t be able to have multiple air bnb investment properties unless there is excess real estate in that area. Air bnb can go bankrupt for all I care and I hope they do.
I would never rent out my house, I don't know what I'd do if they trashed my house, destroyed my things and stole. I wouldn't care about getting compensation, some things can't be replaced.
No. AirB&B exists because hotel and motel prices have gotten out of control. The conglomerates and corporations, as usual, get greedy and that opens the way for the little guy. It reminds me of Dr. Malcolm from Jurassic Park (the movie; played by Jeff Goldblum), who explained "life finds a way."
i hate airbnb... operating a business in a residential neighborhood... we have neighborhood crime watch in my community, we've had to bring cops for suspicious people come in for children safety. every week some new people we haven't seen before would stay at this place... and one day, we heard gunshots. a guest brought a gun, and shot several times. a murder had happened. now this wouldn't have happened if the host didnt do an airbnb. but he did and brought danger to our community.
Hi we're your neighbors who love having strangers around partying all the time and leaving broken bottles on the beach. Always a blast having to constantly explain to them where they can and cannot go. It's great when they let their dogs run free too. This is why we all moved to a nice secluded area, so profit mongers could run our tranquility.
@@davidjma7226 You have no way of vetting whether or not your guests are doing the things your poor neighbor has to put up with. $$ will always come first for you.
@@muleorastromule3491 I feel you..and no solid response from the neighbor making all the money. Why would they give a crap, right?! ‘Our guests would never do all that!’ I’m sorry you have to deal with this. It’s happening everywhere.
@@LetsHavaChat It's very simple. We insist on references from other AirBnb clients like ourselves. If they don't have them we do not accept them. Its part of the AirBnb system. We choose to use it - always. We have never had any problems and our neighbours are very content. So you are incorrect, $'s do not come first for us, references do.And we do not accept pets or smokers. It's called quality control at source, basic risk management really.
AIR bnb screwed me as a guest during covid. I wasted 10 hours trying to cancel according to the cancellation policy and it timed out 100 times. I called and emailed and instant messaged. They ignored me and my request. It made me I'll. Waste my time and keep my money too.
They should have offered insurance from day one and urged hosts to check on their home or have a friend check it while they are gone. Unfortunately, there are many triggers and party hosts that give AirBNB a bad name.
AirBnB has destroyed the rental market. I hope those guys are brainstorming on how to house all the humans they've put on the streets. Ironic that their scheme to pay rent, resulted in millions being unable to afford rent.
@@cheery-hex You do not. I've traveled across the USA many time over in the past decade to know the truth. Best to get your information first-hand. Sorry if you are an AirBnB host, that is just how it is. Played a huge part in destroying local economies.
I’d be curious to know after your stay if the host requires you to clean the place before you leave. The latest with Airbnb is hosts leaving lists of chores for guests on top of huge cleaning fees.
I’ve got to say your channel is addictive, and you always advertise useful stuffs. I was looking for something like brilliant to study Physics. Thank you 🙏🏿
“Rumours of my death have been greatly exaggerated”... Hey guys, John here - good to be back! Sorry for the wait. I’ve been working on multiple videos at the same time the last couple of months, but that means I should have a couple more long documentaries ready for you very soon. And I figured a good one to start with was the crazy story of Airbnb… hope you enjoy! 😁
Also, a huge thanks to Brilliant for sponsoring - you can try it for FREE at brilliant.org/magnates - Brilliant make learning much more fun and interactive, and you can learn some genuinely really useful skills on there. You can test it out for free with the link above, and it helps support this channel too :)
🤑 The BEST Way To Make Money From RUclips: magnatesmedia.com
Glad to have you back, do you have 'business video essays' in your membership subscription, any exclusive content?
take ur time these video take long time to make
Fucking brilliant video, love from India.
Glad to see you back
Thank you for your great videos!
AirBNB was a great thing when people were renting out their own homes on a part-time basis. Once investors began buying up multiple properties for the purpose of being full-time short-term rental properties, it was disastrous for communities.
Sadly that's the problem with pretty much every new ideas and businesses. It starts as something better, more convenient, hip and different from the rest of the corporate world or even against it which attracts people because people are tired of the same corporate models until the big investors come in when they see there is money in it and they make it basically a copy of the rest of the corporate world. Even RUclips became something that works in favor of big corporations, advertisers and mainstream media instead being for the people and alternative to the mainstream media as it was created for. The problem is there is never a balance, ideas are needed and investors are needed to sponsor these ideas, but after some time the balance is always broken and becoming another corporate machine.
Agreed
It can be fixed by applying a limit quota based on how the property cost has increased. Also double check down to detect greedy investor with 10 properties or more.
Those "but AirBnb used to be good" posts fail or do not want to see the point.
AirBnb would never become a large company or even survive if not for industrial scale owners mopping up properties and providing a massive supply of beds. It was part of the plan all the way. Contrariously to their PR babble, it would have been extremely easy and simple to block professional renters from the platform but they won't do it until authorities are able to enforce such bans.
The "homesharing" crap has always been a stunt to make "conscious" hipsters more happy to consume their product.
@@toreadoress wel if people can make money off of youtube then airbnb aint so bad, atleast airbnb give room which is tangoble but youtube just makes you waste your time of boredom
It’s crazy how a company can become worth $100 Billion in Market Cap alone while hardly reporting a real profit. Their owners & founders are worth more money on paper than their company has actually made! Wow!
I've lived in Istanbul as an expat for 18 years. I've lost two apartments to Airbnb. I"m holding onto my present place until I can figure out if I have to leave the country, also thanks to Airbnb. The two guys who couldn't pay their rent have created this nightmare for many others. Here, rents have skyrocketed. Because of economic unrest, the dollar has multiplied many times in value. So we have more tourists than ever before. Professional Airbnb hosts rent the apartments for many times what normal people can pay, do all the repairs, and then rent out the place for Airbnb. The landlords love this. But our courts are backed up for two years, with all the evictions. Many people I know are being evicted. Most nice places are off the normal market now, all bought or rented up by Airbnb people. This is forcing Turkish residents farther and farther from the center of the city. Thriving, close-knit neighborhoods lose their local businesses to souvenir shops and cafes, the place fills up with strangers. If you live in an Airbnb building, your days are numbered. The Airbnb people don't give a damn about noise, trash or anything else. The worst ones are those who turn up their noses at a nice little hotel, rent an Airbnb, and blithely think they're experiencing "the real Istanbul" without realizing they are helping to destroy it.
well said
Sounds like you need to get off of the Middle East bro.
I appreciate this. I love the couple who does the Our Freedom Years RUclips channel, but they didn’t mention or seem aware of this in their videos about Istanbul. I plan to start a long term journey around the world late next year and would love to travel in a better way. Is there any way to see local hotels that might be a better choice? Like in China and the Middle East, there are sites that locals use to find these kinds of places. Is there a travel site that most locals use to book stays?
I m a woman with money - never ever would i even think to rent from airbnb. 4 stars hotel not lower. People who can not afford a 4 stars hotel and higher want to travel too u know, and maybe they do not trust 2-3 stars hotel quality.
@@abbyabroad i do not know how about now with all those russian refugees trying escape the mobilization and invading turkey, but before hotels in turkey were very affordable and all right quality even the cheaper ones so i heard.
Just to clarify, Airbnb chooses 'not to be profitable' so they dont need to pay taxes. Uber "surprisingly" also doesn't make any money... millions people using the app, working countless hours with an app taking a cut from every transaction....
And not 'profitable' so don't need to pay tax?? Well played accountants, well played.
Exactly
But the property owners in the houses in the neighborhoods who live in their houses do and their taxes have been raised. Where I live, Airbnbs have a their own special police department paid for by sales of drugs. So the city and police are essentially promoting drugs in their flyers they tell neighborhood safety groups they need to pass out (which most don't, since the reason the groups started was drugs and shootings from Airbnbs, some activity right next to school playgrounds), and if there's a problem at an Airbnb, the neighbors, even those harmed by the drug activity, have to call on people paid by drug activity for help, which they don't. Help, that is. They live in other cities, not the one in which they work. This is in a "really good city" with $$, so it's weird to be told by the city, people who live in the rich areas, not the middle class, like most of us, we must allow the drugs and drug money, in order to get help when there's crime from Airbnb guests and that our property taxes will be going up, because there's more to take care of, now.
Sometimes I watch your videos not because am interested in the topic but because it feels like a movie and just 30 seconds in am hooked already. Great storytelling and editing.
that's because he uses clips from movies 😂. i get what you meant though
true
Sooo true
@@Dave_of_Mordor I just listen to it, but feel the same way
Ditto
“I’m an entrepreneur “
“No you’re unemployed”
Origin story of every self made billionaire
😂😂😂
Airbnb could be out of of business as aspiring homeowners and renters get frustrated that there is no available long term housing in their area. My city banned it and nearly all neighboring cities either banned it or put restrictions on it. Not to mention, pressure from hotel owners will lobby to ban Airbnb.
There will probably be changed to legislation and new rules but short term rentals definitely aren’t going anywhere. It’s too lucrative and in demand.
I’m curious as to how many listings come from properties bought specifically for Airbnb. If Airbnb wanted to solve this, they could potentially have a limit of one property per host. I think they would lose a lot of money though
@@Dr.Schnizzle Why would airbnb (or any company) hurt their business on purpose?
To whomever reading this: wishing you the best rest of your day/night! Remember, what we think..... We Become
they need to be shutdown, since it'll take having every city they're in change their laws.
I live in a small border beach town, population of 30k. at any given time, there's MAYBE 2-4 long term rentals available.
the housing market as a whole needs an overhaul.
I just came back from a two-month trip to South America, so stayed at plenty of Airbnb. Unfortunately it is no longer a platform where people welcome travelers into their homes. A lot “hosts” are real estate companies that only care about the bottom line. You run into issues you won’t normally find in a hotel such as loud construction in the building, “amenities” the host listed don’t work, cockroaches, no heater in cold weather, etc. In some countries such as Colombia, hotels are better values than Airbnb after all the various “fees” the platform and host charge.
It was my first time stayed in Airbnb in this October when I returned to Mississauga Ontario; unfortunately, I was scammed by the Airbnb host and guest, they set me up and booked a room under my account . When I realized that it was a scam and I reported this accident to Airbnb support team, but nobody were able to help me to get my money back. Ever since then I've lost my trust and confidence with Airbnb and have promised myself would never ever stay in Airbnb anymore!!!
I really don't understand why landlords who decided to give up long term letting in favour of short term have been refunded, they made a decision but they didn't face the consequences.
That said Airbnb is a really useful service but at the same time the reduction in long term rents is a major problem, I am curious to see how it will be solved
Sedona, AZ is the perfect example of an Airbnb town.
Almost no local anymore.
Entire neighborhoods are now Airbnb's.
It's REALLY weird.
Brisbane city council has said to home owners if they’re with air bnb their yearly rates for services will double, the rental market is so tight because of air bnb .
Personally speaking I don’t use Airbnb because by the time you add all the fees and taxes, you’ll be paying the cost of a 5 star hotel. So that $100/night room ends up being $200/night after fees and taxes. No thanks.
It depends, we use it for work and it is a lot cheaper for 4 guys to rent a house than to get 4 hotel rooms.
Airbnb doesn't risk anything, they don't own the buildings, they don't have mortgages to pay, they only take a fee for renting space in your house. You take all the risk
just like uber
I cant believe i only just discovered this channel. Im literally addicted. Ive listened to about 5 videos whilst at work today. Absolutely insane quality and story telling
It's a shame. Air B&B was such a good idea at first. But the moment someone decided to rent out their house while they were away or use it for landlording it went to Hell.
They should have never removed the requirement that hosts be at the home.
Honestly, good on those guys for being willing to take financial hits to do the right thing. Not even as a PR move, but just because they knew they should.
In 2015 I stayed for a week in NY and I could only afford an Airbnb. The hotels I could find for the same price looked abandoned. For people on a budget Airbnb is great, cheaper than a hotel. It's no wonder why people choose them over hotels.
true
and for those who say the visitors ate noisy and don't contribute. I think that is a over genetalisation. Most visitors...short tennants...hotel stayers...tourists treat whwre they stay respectfully. People just remember those few who don't and extrapolate.
your channel has become one of my favorite ways to learn things
I've travelled a lot the last years pre covid, and I did check out Airbnd a few times. Never ever did it tempt me in any way. Almost same prices as hotels, no good breakfast buffet as almost every European hotel have, hotels are safer, most options far from city centers, and so on. The ONLY positive was it often had free parking, but that isn't expensive at hotels with a garage.
So I've never used it, and never ever will. I'll stick with hotels, as I've always done.
I love the business idea . The thing is now they became so big they are not realising that people are not happy for the high prices and problems it has created. People are back on booking hotels and residents are paying the price of high rents .
As a regular user of AirBnB i will never use them again NEVER
when i rented an apartment there was no one there and DERELICT
Waited 2 hours and when i looked through the windows it was clear i was SCAMMED
Trying to get a refund was CRAZY STUPID they asked did you take a picture of the locked door i told them i was miles away now in another hotel they refused a refund
2 years later i had the same thing happen in the UK and refused to give a refund again
Motto of this story A company is only as good as their backup service
You THINK a company is good until you need them to help you
In this case totally useless and ripped off
As a former Airbnb host, they haven't improved their platform, they've just made it easier to protect themselves. In addition, with more Airbnb properties opening up, there are less options for affordable housing, driving up costs of property, creating a need to build more homes which no one lives in. This is especially disturbing since homelessness is on the rise. Not to mention the environmental cost to build these unnecessary properties. Also, guests treat your neighborhood like they treat you space, disposable, and if you haven't written the war and peace of house rules, you'll be responsible for the bill. I submitted a claim less than $300. It took 5 months of correspondence to get a partial payout because I did the repair myself. Since I didnt have a bill from a professional, since it was over Christmas, I wasn't reimbursed for the time and effort it took me to repair. Because I was an owner occupied property, I closed down my units immediately, while waiting for a resolution. I ultimately closed then down for good, because if they are going to give me a hard time over something so small, what would they do if I actually had a large claim.
I already know this story well, having heard it on various podcasts, but clicked on this because I love your style of storytelling! Keep it up
lol my Airbnb host in new York tried to borrow money from me to pay for her tuition!! she claimed that I would be getting my money back because her bf was rich!! hahaha 😂 I was like, if you have a rich bf, get him to pay for your tuition
I'm from Berlin, Germany and Chapter 5 is 100% true. Reported 4 Landlords myself and one found out. He threatened me and I sued. I won, but I still lost. Because now, his family is "living" there renting out "extra rooms". In short: No one lives there and the whole flat is rented out.
well, can't threaten you anymore at least
good for them. I'd tell you to mind you own business as well.
I am sure you would have been a fantastic informant for Stasi some decades ago... Snitch..
Mind your business
I've used airbnb twice and only had good experiences. The first time was in New York in 2008, so it's quite fun to think that it was at their birth and I had no idea. This story is very well told, he always does this; making me think oh, this is so blissful, what could possibly go wrong? and then... the dark enters.
Airbnb is partially responsible for the rise of condos in the Philippines. The ordinary Filipino don't want to live in them. Mostly foreigners buy them initially since foreigners are not allowed to own land nor houses only condonimiums. Since hotels here are expensive and renting a house or apartment less than a month to few months isn't cost feasible, Filipinos are now buying condos to rent them out for Airbnb. This causes problems to actual residents of condos since these guests would go to condo pool that by default reserved for condo residents and occupy the restaurants in the ground floor.
Sounds like Filipinos and their incompetence are entirely responsible
This was really a good business idea except the tenants who started using their rented places to make money that was unethical, I also agree with locals who complained that this Airbnb took properties that are for long term rental away from them,and also they felt like they are foreigners in their own country that was really painful for those citizens.The part that touched me the most was the story of the lady whom her property was vandalised and her belongings were stolen what is worse was how her problem was handled by Airbnb.
Really.. the person's whose house was destroyed touched you the most. So weird
Some people don’t understand how rentals work, I do long terms and AirBNB. So I have ample experiences.
@Boyce.
Her problem was handled with compensation in the end. She wasn't just left on her own. Do you have a short attention span?
Airbnb didn't TAKE long term rentals off the market, they afforded investors an opportunity to make more money, aka capitalism.
@@Iron-Bridge Such douchy comments here
Another well researched, high quality video. Well done and keep them coming!
The late 80's and early 90's before the internet was a tool for everyone, there used to be a monthly news letter called $20 or Less where cheap motels, motels offering a discount to subscribers or private property owners could list cheap rooms, a spare RV space or a campsite for short stays and such. It was great for me while I was traveling and working on the road. As a member any place I stayed at I could flip through their current newsletter, make some calls and arrange for another rental where ever I'm going to or just hand write down a potential of places to check out once I got there. I thought that was pretty novel, cool and a low key way to avoid boondocking or stealth camping. Yeah it didn't always work out. Some places were fleabags or a room or camper at a rundown house in the hood, no vacancy when I got there or no one there at all but I would just get a more expensive motel or just find a place to stealth camp in the area if that was the case. That news letter disappeared around 93.
Ok, the cereal thing has left me confused. So they took another company's product, removed it from the packaging and stuck it into their own packaging? How did they not get sued when this came to light? Reminds me of John Cusack's character in the movie "The Road to Wellville".
They never said what cereal they stole…. 😂
So sad for the host that had her house & valuables stolen & destroying. The response to that confused me though. Were the identities of the people not known? They should have been arrested & presecuted 🤷🏾♂️ . There should always be before & after images & videos for each occupancy for documentation & legal reasons ...
Good question 🤔
I blame AirBnB for the current accommodation crisis in country. Currently there are 3000 rentals available in an entire country of 5M people. There are 25,515 AirBnB listings.
I stayed in Airbnb a. Couple of times till last year with horrible experience. The studio we rented does not even have a lock on the door. Next day we found that there were bears around the neighborhood. This was near Yosemite national park usa. We checked out one day earlier. Airbnb refused to refund us and asking me for a photo of the door and a photo showing no hot water in the sink. So ridiculous, never again with Airbnb.
Show a picture of no hot water? Hahahah, ridiculous.
You sound like one of those guests that are better suited for a motel or even staying home... You are near a national park and surprised that there is wild life over there? 😂😂
How you convert a case study in to a movie? Man, you're the best storyteller!
Early potential investors probably didn’t invest because they were super wealthy themselves so could not see that they would rent one or rent out their house.
That's not how investors work lol they don't need to see use for something for themselves to invest and often don't (think of all the men and women in their 60's and 70's who invest in social media or invested) I doubt they are running to download the app once it becomes available... the bottom line is money
Kind of ironic that before I even start watching a video titled "The Dark Truth About Airbnb", I get shown an ad about Free Airbnb Case Studies on Airbnb business practices to make profits.
These guys are very humble they love the people more then the money it seems like.
And thank you for making this video
Best Work To Watch Now ✅✅✅
I done this to pay my rent before Air BNB existed and advertised on Gumtree... if only I knew I could make it a multi million dollar business
She was like “you’re unemployed!”
“…and she was RIGHT” 😂😂😂
Among a lot of "sharing" economy models, Airbnb never made sense to me in particular. I mean, hotels and motels are subject to many regulations (health, fire, employment, etc.) I guess Airbnb is not subject to any of them in most places. How is that fair? Supporters may say "it is just like a short-term rental." Well, there are two problems with that: Renting out your property is also subject to some regulations, although often people are not aware of them. Is Airbnb subject to those? Also, Airbnb is clearly pitched as a sort of "hotel," not short-term rental (for which, there were already other websites).
Why did politicians let this happen? (Campaign "donations" and other "contributions", I guess.) Uber has a similar problem.
Also, I know at least one family who first put their spare room on Airbnb but later converted it to long-term rental because they realized it didn't make as much money as renting it out. So, beware.
Depends where you live. First month of owning a apartment, we rented it on airbnb for 4k euros(at that point almost 5k dollars). After that we moved to long term rent, 1200 a month. Take into account that monthly bill for airbnb was same as long term. Airbnb makes a lot of sense money wise if you have the time to clean and care. Long term, you sign the contract and next time you come is to get the keys back after a year or more.
Same reason they allowed the hire car company Uber to con them and destroy the taxi industry. They sold it as ride share, to appeal to the mindless young hip crowd. Nothing ride share about it. It is clearly a hire car company and so should have been subject to the same regulations as them. I can only think corrupt and stupid politicians allowed that exploitative, cancerous company to grow. Although it also makes massive losses.
What no one is talking about is how Airbnb has completely destroyed the home rental market. Good luck to young people and families who need to rent until they can buy a home, when almost all rental homes are rented by the day and way too expensive to rent annually. I mean, why would an owner want to rent a home out for $1500 a month, when they can charge $150 per day? Where I live, in 2016 you could rent a 3br, 2 bath home for $1200-1400 per month. Now, if you can even find one available, they rent for $2400 + And the only owners who don’t use Airbnb, refuse to use it because of the fear of the destruction of the property, and increased maintenance costs from higher numbers of guests. But most of them are on Airbnb and are not available for annual rental. Here in Florida, because of the travel based economy, I would like to see only beach front homes available on Airbnb.
Hardly reality. The overwhelming majority of great short term vacationnrentals are unaffordable and undesirable to that market. The best vacation rentals (beach, destination homes, second homes families use and rent anyway) are never good netry level rentals. that's just economics.
@@gextreme2381 you just don’t get it. I travel all over the country for work. I stay in Airbnbs everywhere. Hardly ever in vacation heavy areas. And there are airbnbs everywhere I go. And when we moved to Florida we did rent a house on the beach. Those houses used to be affordable. Now, if they aren’t on Airbnb, they are on VRBO and not available to young families. So some families definitely want to rent those properties in vacation areas, and used to actually be affordable. Everywhere I travel, I look at available annual rentals and there are far too few available for young families
It’s insane to me how a company can grow to that size, with that many employees, some of which earn millions per year in their roles, cannot turn a profit.
Being someone who owns a business which is profitable, but absolutely minuscule in comparison, I just cannot understand it.
It's quite simple. The investors are only focusing on growth and growth expectation so the share prices keep rising and they can sell with a profit to the next on and so on, much like a pyramid scheme. Distributing profit means less investment for growth
+ taxes on profit is pure loss
Welcome to late capitalism. It simply became a cult. "investors" are so ideologically hellbent in creating a "new world" (that sounds dystopic to any decent person) that they are willing to perennially lose money backing companies such as AirBnb, Uber and Foodora. It doesn't make a difference to them because wealth concentration has never been so high, so the investors have basically infinite assets and it doesn't matter if they make bad decisions
@@fgui11 hey dude you answered it simple. I'm a newbie in this investment thing. So where can I start any books, videos, documentary any recommendations please
The narration ,The Pacing , The animation ur videos are extremely good.
your mom
I wonder if he gon talk about the bad stuff about Airbnb especially now a days people posting certain pictures and it not even being the home listed .. peoples homes getting renting out without they knowledge 😕
This guy should be way more popular he makes great content. Better than the content that’s in circulation right now❤️
Get a good look at the scambot responding to your comment 🤣
@@MegaHerpityDerpity totally
If you rent any place out, you don’t leave anything to the rent cucks that stay there. You also make sure the guests don’t fuck up. Honestly, leaving your documents and grandma’s jewelry in a rented appartement is the worst you can do. My mother left a brass candle stand in our city apparent and the tenants stole it. Some people learn the hard way unfortunately.
Happen close to where I live, the place wasn't trashed but it was robbed, and they use the place to have massive all night loud parties. There was also some landlords who kicked out tenants and used rental places for Airbnb instead. So you don't need hotel unions to galvanize people, it's a horror show waiting to happen on its own.
The concept behind Airbnb is a good one in my opinion, I have used the service multiple times, unfortunately, with everything in this world, there are always going to be people who are greedy and try to take advantage of things at any cost.
I don't feel terribly bad for the unethical hosts with multiple properties who didn't have bookings during the height of the pandemic, especially knowing that many of these type of hosts created a very unpleasant situation for renters. So many people lost jobs and where I live, and most didn't get any type of compensation. Like with everything, some honest hosts suffered loss, which is a byproduct of whenever things go bad.
I am amazed by the meaningful, practical and interesting videos you always seem to create. Keep it up.
I've stayed at pleasant Airbnb's and saved money. Nicely furnished, etc. I knew they probably had video surveillance which wasn't always comfortable...I wanted to report a couple because I heard crazy thumping coming from their basement but tried to go to the App and report - couldn't find a link to do it. I always left the places clean .
Your every video is better than the previous one, story, narration, editing..... Just everything 😙
His editor is really talented and she deserves lots of credit.
10:00 "That's a common theme amongst investors... They are often investing in the founders themselves."
- John, 2022
Thanks for all your great work, John.
The founders saying they think it shouldn't have worked is like a chef saying he didn't expect his food to be edible. C'mon guys, you wouldn't engage in the act if you didn't have the slightest consideration for the fact that the project may succeed.
Your content and story telling is awesome. I never knew any of these background stories so these are actually eye openers for me and really entertaining as well. Can't imagine the case studying and work that was put into creating these videos. Well done.
Its AI Open source.. ChatGPT Its even going to do a video soon on itself.
Is it me or his video editing skills are spot on😂😂😂
I had all the same thoughts as the investors… until a few friends told me they used it and it was great. Then I tried it and found it way less weird than I expected but that’s changed of course. The last one I stayed in had a 3 page list on how to clean and wasn’t inexpensive. I’m happily back in hotels and motels.
Here in Wimbledon (UK), back in the 1970's, people living in large detached houses near the tennis tournament started renting out parking spaces on their frontages and drives. In some cases it escalated to offering their spare room and breakfast to visitors the following year. In one case, a family simply swapped. The visitors had accommodation a few minutes walk from the tennis, while the owners spent the two weeks relaxing in the south of France.
With all the nanny state rules and insurance not covering paying visitors or their cars, over recent years the whole thing seems to have died out.
Airbnb is good for the person that skirts around the expensive stay in a hotel room, but it's bad for the rest of the people in the city.
Why is that ?
The owner cooking you breakfast 😂😂😂 imagine getting cooked unseasoned food in the am by a stranger you paid
Air BnB has messed up the possible rental properties or properties that would be bought by a family. I live in the Helen Ga area and it's a small tourist town but the air BnB spread out into even the towns around Helen, up to 45 mins away. This area needs workers yet workers can't afford to live in the area because rent has skyrocketed since air BnB.
@@Bb-jm6wx yeah short term rentals. Like a weekend. Duh.
Watching every second of this video makes me wonder why the views don’t match the quality. Good work on this, it’s always great to watch an amazing story!
you forgot to mention the dangers of hidden cameras in airbnbs
Epic video. I can't imagine how much work went into this.
Thanks a lot.
It does make sense that it would take away affordable housing for long term renters. Not being able to afford decent housing in the town you live is unacceptable. It gives landlords the opportunity to price gouge long term renters or make more money on short term rentals of the property.
AirBnB should be regulated so that private citizens can rent out a room or two and that’s it.
No evicting a long term renter just so the landlord can rent it through AirBnB.
No buying multiple properties just to short term rent them out.
AirBnB is destroying areas that are already hurting economically.
I refuse to have anything to do with AirBnB anywhere.
I have stayed in airbnb that were cleaner than some hotel rooms.
Amazing work John! Your videos are rich and full of so so so many lessons. Mad respect to the level of research, time and energy you’ve put into these. You deserve so much appreciation, abundance and prosperity coming your way!
Air bnb is so damaging to the apartment rental market that I cannot support it. Especially with current housing crisis’s we don’t need residences sitting vacant for tourists short term visits while locals struggle to find permanent housing. And you shouldn’t be able to have multiple air bnb investment properties unless there is excess real estate in that area. Air bnb can go bankrupt for all I care and I hope they do.
I would never rent out my house, I don't know what I'd do if they trashed my house, destroyed my things and stole. I wouldn't care about getting compensation, some things can't be replaced.
You got me hooked on your videos. I watch them over and over without getting tired!
This channel is top notch! You deserve millions more of subscribers! Thank you for your channel! Absolutely love it!
No. AirB&B exists because hotel and motel prices have gotten out of control. The conglomerates and corporations, as usual, get greedy and that opens the way for the little guy. It reminds me of Dr. Malcolm from Jurassic Park (the movie; played by Jeff Goldblum), who explained "life finds a way."
i hate airbnb...
operating a business in a residential neighborhood...
we have neighborhood crime watch in my community, we've had to bring cops for suspicious people come in for children safety. every week some new people we haven't seen before would stay at this place... and one day, we heard gunshots. a guest brought a gun, and shot several times. a murder had happened. now this wouldn't have happened if the host didnt do an airbnb. but he did and brought danger to our community.
Wake up every morning with heart pounding. Who doesn't?
Every overvalued new company always rise big, fast.
But, every overvalued new company also almost always fall. . fast.
good stuff , from Africa kenya we love you all , peace
I am an Airbnb landlord and rent a two bed apartment at the beach. Everything they do makes it easier for me. And brilliant guests too.
Hi we're your neighbors who love having strangers around partying all the time and leaving broken bottles on the beach. Always a blast having to constantly explain to them where they can and cannot go. It's great when they let their dogs run free too. This is why we all moved to a nice secluded area, so profit mongers could run our tranquility.
@@muleorastromule3491 We vet our visitors beforehand. We want to know our property is safe and relations with our neighbors are better than ever
@@davidjma7226
You have no way of vetting whether or not your guests are doing the things your poor neighbor has to put up with. $$ will always come first for you.
@@muleorastromule3491 I feel you..and no solid response from the neighbor making all the money. Why would they give a crap, right?! ‘Our guests would never do all that!’ I’m sorry you have to deal with this. It’s happening everywhere.
@@LetsHavaChat It's very simple. We insist on references from other AirBnb clients like ourselves. If they don't have them we do not accept them. Its part of the AirBnb system. We choose to use it - always. We have never had any problems and our neighbours are very content. So you are incorrect, $'s do not come first for us, references do.And we do not accept pets or smokers. It's called quality control at source, basic risk management really.
I got an AirBnb ad halfway though the video during the first horror story, oh man the timing
I'm still searching for the "Dark Truth".
AIR bnb screwed me as a guest during covid. I wasted 10 hours trying to cancel according to the cancellation policy and it timed out 100 times. I called and emailed and instant messaged. They ignored me and my request. It made me I'll. Waste my time and keep my money too.
So glad you're still here man
Your videos are so interesting. Thank you!
They should have offered insurance from day one and urged hosts to check on their home or have a friend check it while they are gone. Unfortunately, there are many triggers and party hosts that give AirBNB a bad name.
This was very well done. Thank you!
We used it once. Never will use it again.
AirBnB has destroyed the rental market. I hope those guys are brainstorming on how to house all the humans they've put on the streets. Ironic that their scheme to pay rent, resulted in millions being unable to afford rent.
you don't understand how things work
@@cheery-hex You do not. I've traveled across the USA many time over in the past decade to know the truth. Best to get your information first-hand. Sorry if you are an AirBnB host, that is just how it is. Played a huge part in destroying local economies.
Gonna be using Airbnb for the first time in September. Glad this wasn't a horror story.
I’d be curious to know after your stay if the host requires you to clean the place before you leave. The latest with Airbnb is hosts leaving lists of chores for guests on top of huge cleaning fees.
Wooow awesome work here.
Its really been long without anything from your. Happy to see you back. The time was so worth.
Perfect output
I’ve got to say your channel is addictive, and you always advertise useful stuffs. I was looking for something like brilliant to study Physics. Thank you 🙏🏿
Recently subscribed. Beautiful video thanks
This channel is amazing 👍🏼 thank you for your work 🤜🏾🤛🏼
Dude, the story telling is next level 🎉
I like your video formats, so cinematic and deep lore in every topic. good job
Maaan that was so so dark,just darker than dark, I will have nightmares for months now,just dark,so dark
oh gosh... felt heartbroken when listening to the girl's story. Glad got financial help
Welcome back, The knowledge has returned to RUclips.
Glad to see you back