My vacation rental has mice! Shouldn't Airbnb refund me? - Elliott Advocacy

2022-05-21 22:29:39 By : Ms. Diana Jia

Home » Travel Problems » My vacation rental has mice! Shouldn’t Airbnb refund me?

If you book a vacation rental and it has mice, are you responsible for catching and disposing of the rodents? And if so, does the Airbnb host owe you a refund or other compensation for your troubles?

That’s what Gabriella Costanza wants to know after her recent unpleasant experience. She and her significant other had planned to celebrate the holidays in a clean, cozy Airbnb property. Unfortunately, soon after the couple arrived, it became clear they weren’t alone in the vacation rental. And although Airbnb allows shared-space rentals, these additional “residents” were of the most unwelcome and unapproved kind – mice.

But maybe even worse than the reality that mice were living at this Airbnb was the host’s response. This vacation rental owner expected Costanza to put down glue traps and spend her holiday dealing with the inevitable outcome. Which the young traveler did.

Now Costanza is asking Airbnb for a refund for this vacation rental experience. But will the fact that the couple completed their entire stay make that an impossible outcome?

Late last fall, Costanza’s long-distance beau, Toby, made plans to spend the last two weeks of the year with her. He would fly from Arizona to New Jersey in mid-December. Costanza, a full-time student, began searching for a suitable Airbnb where the couple could enjoy the holidays.

Before we go any further into this story, I should disclose that I have more than a passing interest in this case. Gabriella is all grown up now. But for much of her childhood, for various reasons, she lived with my family. So I’ve been her “mom by proxy” for many years. However, our relationship did not change how I mediated this case.

OK, back to Costanza’s saga.

Being a full-time student on a budget, Costanza was looking for a reasonably priced one-bedroom apartment. She wasn’t looking for anything fancy, but cleanliness was a priority.

“We wanted to stay somewhere near the Rutgers campus,” Costanza explained. “I found an apartment that was only $89 a night, and it was in a great location.”

Costanza, who had never booked an Airbnb on her own before, looked at the photos and some of the reviews and made her decision. She confirmed the property, paying just under $1,000 for the 10-night stay.

That was easy enough, she thought. Next, Costanza set about making other holiday plans and looked forward to Toby’s arrival.

Late afternoon on Christmas Eve, Toby arrived from Phoenix. The couple took the short drive from Newark to the Airbnb and checked in.

The first thing we noticed is that the apartment looked a bit run down. The photos of the Airbnb site looked much better. But then, when we looked a little closer, we saw mold and other signs the place wasn’t clean. I was a little embarrassed since I picked this vacation rental. I figured I would do a little cleaning. But then I saw that the only sponge in the house had black mold.

It was getting late, and the couple had plans early the next morning, so they decided to call it a day.

“When we went into the bedroom, I noticed right away that the only smoke detector in the unit wasn’t working,” Costanza reported.

Not only was the smoke detector not “working,” but oddly, it looked like it had actually caught on fire at some point.

When Costanza went into the bathroom to brush her teeth and change into her PJs, things continued to get worse.

“There was mold and grime on the sink and bathtub,” Costanza reported. “By this time, I was really disappointed with myself for picking this place.”

But when the couple turned out the lights, things went from bad to worse.

As the tired duo began to drift off to sleep on their Christmas Eve, Costanza heard a little rustling on the floor.

I sat up in bed and flipped on the light, but I didn’t see anything. I thought maybe I had imagined the sound, so I turned the light off and tried to go to sleep. Sure enough, a few minutes later, I heard the same sound on the other side of the room. I was pretty sure a mouse was running around, but I didn’t see it – yet.

After a few more rounds of turning the lights on and off and trying to go back to sleep, she finally caught a glimpse of the offending creature.

“I was so grossed out,” Costanza recalled. “I only saw it for a second, but it looked big like a rat.”

As a result of that sighting, she stayed up almost the whole night, afraid the rodent would crawl on her.

The next day – Christmas Day – the couple was up early heading to visit family. Costanza says she didn’t text the owner that day because she thought maybe her sighting was a fluke.

“I didn’t want to bother the host until I saw the mouse or rat again,” Costanza says. “I thought maybe I was imagining things.”

That night, though, there was no mistake — there were mice at this vacation rental.

Just after the lights went out again, the couple heard the familiar pitter-patter of tiny feet. Not only that, Costanza says when she looked under some of the furniture, she saw what looked like rodent droppings.

Sure of herself now, Costanza contacted the host by text to report the problem.

Although the host assured Costanza that she had never had a rat problem before, she committed to sending an exterminator over to the property.

However, the host did not send an exterminator the next day. Instead, when Costanza returned from a day out with Toby, she found a bag of glue traps that the Airbnb host had dropped off with instructions to place the traps around the apartment.

And soon Costanza was faced with a new, more disturbing problem.

Anyone familiar with glue traps can already foresee the unpleasant situation that was about to hit Costanza. But in case you don’t know, glue traps don’t kill mice, they only imprison them on a bed of sticky gunk. This leaves the creature’s fate up to the person who discovers the trapped rodent.

The Humane Society says that glue traps are one of the cruelest and most dangerous forms of pest control.

If you’re an animal lover, even if you don’t love rodents, you likely aren’t keen on killing a mouse on a glue trap. But if you find an animal stuck on one of these torture devices, you will be forced to do one of three things: 1) Allow it to suffer and die slowly. This might take days. 2) Find some way to kill it quickly. 3) Spend time on a rescue mission to slowly release the animal from the trap and then take it outside and set it free.

I’ve had my own extensive experience with these glue traps. In my early career as a psychotherapist, I worked in a very old state psychiatric hospital in Brooklyn. The place was overrun with rodents. In fact, I would often find mice living in my desk drawer. Believe me when I tell you that it is incredibly distracting to be in a session with a patient and find a mouse staring up at you when you reach for a pen.

The answer to my complaint was for hospital maintenance to hand me a pile of glue traps. Suddenly I had a whole new time-consuming problem. When I arrived for work each day, I would find at least one trapped mouse screaming inside my desk. So I learned how to carefully take them off the trap and release them out into the yard.

It isn’t easy, and it isn’t quick… and sometimes it doesn’t work. I will spare you further details, but when this mission fails, it’s very disturbing for anyone with emotions.

This is the situation that Costanza soon found herself in, an experience for which she had paid Airbnb nearly $1,000.

Within hours of placing the glue trap, Costanza heard a different noise. This time there was no rustling but screeching. She turned on the lights and found this:

Now sleep was no longer possible because the mouse was crying, and Costanza didn’t know what to do. She immediately picked up the rest of the glue traps because she had no desire to catch any more of these tiny creatures.

I really didn’t know what to do. This was very upsetting to me because the little guy was in pain. His leg was twisted in a very weird way, and he was looking at us for help. I was crying. Toby was forced to put it out of its misery because it was stuck and injured, and he didn’t want it to keep suffering. It was very traumatic and not something I wanted to do.

I just stopped complaining about the mice then. And I figured since it was the holidays, there wouldn’t be anything Airbnb could do. So we decided just to finish our stay and spend as much time away from the property as possible. (Costanza describing her experience.)

If you’re a regular reader of this site, you know this was a mistake. Airbnb users must alert the resolution team as soon as a significant problem becomes apparent. That is if the renter hopes to receive a refund (or rehousing) from Airbnb.

Of course, we know that involving Airbnb right away doesn’t guarantee an easy path to a refund even in the most egregious situations (See: Is this the worst Airbnb experience ever?). But this is a required step as per the terms and conditions of use.

However, being a novice Airbnb user, Costanza wasn’t aware of this requirement. She took photos and notes and completed her stay. THEN she contacted Airbnb.

Definitely the wrong order of events.

After Toby flew home to Sedona, Costanza compiled her documentation about her experience and sent it to Airbnb.

Although an Airbnb ambassador promised to “review” Costanza’s complaint, several weeks after the rental, she was still waiting for the results.

That’s when she decided to tell me about what had happened and submit her case to the Elliott Advocacy team.

“Michelle, do you think Airbnb owes me a refund based on all of this?” she asked. “I should have talked to you sooner about this.”

The truth was that I could see that she had done quite a few things wrong, and I explained that to Gabriella. But I also know that sometimes, in situations where something has clearly gone wrong, the Airbnb team will make exceptions.

Since I don’t think anyone should have to pay for the privilege of pulling rodents off of glue traps in their vacation rental, I decided to send her case to Airbnb.

… Upon entering the property, Ms. Costanza found mold and other alarming signs of an unkempt property. At night she began to hear chewing noises around the apartment, and then she found signs of an infestation of mice (droppings and little footprints in the dust on the floor). When Ms. Costanza contacted the host about her concerns, the host said she would send an exterminator, but instead, she just dropped off mouse traps — the glue kind that doesn’t kill the mouse but just leaves it stuck in the glue for the humans who find it that way to deal with. So this left Ms. Costanza to deal with the live, entrapped rodents during her stay.

I don’t know what can be done now. But the host has been nonresponsive to Ms. Costanza’s request for some kind of refund. Airbnb is looking into it, but she’s not heard anything for over a week, and she’s concerned that her case is being ignored. She is a college student, and I think it’s possible the host didn’t take her complaints or concerns seriously because of her age and unfamiliarity with Airbnb.

Could your team have a look at her case? I’ve included the photos of one of the rodents Ms. Costanza was responsible for taking care of and disposing of during her stay, as well as the broken fire detector and moldy kitchen area. Thanks! (Please note that the mouse on the trap is alive) – (Michelle to the Airbnb resolution team)

It turns out that Airbnb agrees that a vacation rental should be free of rodents. And if it isn’t, the guests should not be charged to handle mice.

The Airbnb executive team decided to refund Costanza completely for this stay.

This was a lot of money for me to spend on this vacation rental. This was an expensive and disturbing experience. This host should not make her guests catch mice. I appreciate that Airbnb sent me a refund. Thank you for your help. (Costanza)

Vacation rental refunds are one of the common help requests we get from travelers. Unfortunately, many of these cases are impossible to resolve successfully. The reason? The travelers didn’t follow the required steps before, during, and after the rental to qualify for a refund.

Here’s how to make sure that you get an Airbnb refund if your vacation rental turns out to be unacceptable.

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