Compliance
Airbnb Safety Essentials: Legal Requirements + Best Practices
June 3, 2026
Here's what most hosts get wrong about safety.
They think: "I'll get a smoke detector. Maybe a fire extinguisher. That's enough."
Then a guest gets hurt. Or the city inspector shows up. Or worse.
Safety isn't optional. It's not just about protecting guests. It's about protecting yourself from lawsuits, fines, and losing your business.
We manage 50+ properties in Indianapolis. We've dealt with safety inspections, liability situations, and emergency scenarios.
Here's exactly what's legally required, what's smart to have beyond that, and how to avoid getting sued or shut down.
What's Legally Required (The Non-Negotiables)
These aren't suggestions. These are law in most places (including Indianapolis).
1. Smoke Detectors
Where you need them:
- Every bedroom
- Every hallway outside bedrooms
- Every floor of the property
- Kitchen (10+ feet from cooking appliances)
Type: Hardwired with battery backup, OR battery-powered with 10-year sealed batteries
How many: 3-bedroom house = minimum 5 smoke detectors
Testing: Monthly (your cleaner should test after every checkout)
Replacement: Every 10 years (write the install date on each detector)
Penalty for not having them: $500-$1,000+ fine per violation. Property can be shut down immediately.
2. Carbon Monoxide Detectors
Where you need them:
- Every floor
- Within 15 feet of bedrooms
- Near any fuel-burning appliances (furnace, water heater, fireplace)
When required: If you have gas appliances, fireplace, or attached garage
Type: Battery-powered or plug-in with battery backup
Testing: Monthly
Replacement: Every 5-7 years (check manufacturer date)
Why this matters: CO is odorless. Guests won't know until they're unconscious. This saves lives.
3. Fire Extinguisher
Where you need it:
- Kitchen (easily accessible, not behind anything)
- Near any fireplace
- Each floor if multi-story
Type: ABC-rated (works on all fire types)
Size: 5-10 lb minimum
Mounting: On wall, clear signage, 3-5 feet off ground
Inspection: Check pressure gauge monthly. Professional inspection annually.
Common mistake: Buying one, putting it in a cabinet, forgetting about it for 5 years. When guest needs it? Expired or empty.
4. Emergency Exit Plan
What's required:
- Clearly marked exits
- Exit signs or lights (if commercial building)
- Egress windows in bedrooms (specific size requirements)
- No blocked exits ever
Indianapolis specific: Basement bedrooms must have egress window or door
Post this: Emergency exit map in every bedroom or near front door
5. Address Numbers Visible from Street
Why: First responders need to find your property fast.
Requirements:
- Minimum 4" tall numbers
- Contrasting color from background
- Visible from street (not blocked by trees, bushes)
- Lit at night or reflective
Penalty: Fine + liability if emergency services can't find property
What's Required for STR Permit in Indianapolis
Beyond basic safety, Indianapolis requires:
Before getting your STR permit:
- Safety inspection by city inspector
- All smoke/CO detectors working
- Fire extinguisher present
- No code violations
- Property meets zoning requirements
During inspection they check:
- All safety equipment
- Electrical outlets (must have covers)
- Handrails on stairs
- Windows open/close properly
- No structural hazards
If you fail: Fix issues, schedule re-inspection, can't legally operate until you pass.
Beyond Legal Requirements: What You Should Have
These aren't legally required. But they're smart.
1. First Aid Kit
What to include:
- Band-aids (various sizes)
- Gauze pads
- Medical tape
- Antibiotic ointment
- Pain reliever (ibuprofen/acetaminophen)
- Tweezers
- Scissors
- Instant cold pack
Where to put it: Clearly labeled in bathroom cabinet or kitchen
Why: Guest cuts finger cooking. Trips on sidewalk. Minor stuff happens. Have supplies ready.
2. Flashlights with Fresh Batteries
Where to put them:
- Kitchen drawer
- Each bedroom nightstand
- Basement (if applicable)
Why: Power goes out. Guest needs to navigate in dark.
Pro tip: Check batteries every 6 months. Write check date on flashlight.
3. Emergency Contact List
Post this near front door or on fridge:
- Your phone number
- Backup contact (if you're unreachable)
- 911 (yes, obvious, but include it)
- Non-emergency police: (317) 327-3811
- Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222
- Nearest hospital: [Name + Address]
- Gas/Electric company emergency: [Number]
Why: Guest panics. Can't think clearly. Needs numbers fast.
4. Window/Door Locks That Work
Check monthly:
- All windows lock securely
- All doors lock from inside
- Deadbolts function properly
- Sliding doors have security bar
Why: Guest safety. Your liability. Insurance requirement.
5. Exterior Lighting
What you need:
- Porch light
- Motion lights on walkways
- Well-lit parking area
- No dark corners
Why: Prevents trips, falls, break-ins.
6. Non-Slip Surfaces
Where to add them:
- Bathtubs/showers (non-slip mats or strips)
- Stairs (tread strips or non-slip coating)
- Entryways in winter (salt/sand available)
Why: Slip-and-fall = most common guest injury = lawsuit.
Pool/Hot Tub Safety (If You Have Them)
Extra requirements:
- Fence with self-closing gate (pool)
- Locked cover when not in use (hot tub)
- Safety rules posted
- No-glass rule enforced
- Chemical testing kit available
- Emergency shutoff clearly marked
Liability: Pools/hot tubs dramatically increase insurance premiums and lawsuit risk.
Our take: Unless you're in a market where they're expected (vacation rentals), skip them.
Monthly Safety Inspection Checklist
Your cleaner should check these after every checkout:
Smoke/CO Detectors:
- ☐ Test each detector (press test button)
- ☐ Replace batteries if chirping
- ☐ Check expiration dates
Fire Extinguisher:
- ☐ Check pressure gauge (green zone)
- ☐ Clear access (nothing blocking it)
- ☐ Pin intact
Exits:
- ☐ All doors unlock from inside
- ☐ No blocked exits
- ☐ Windows open properly
Electrical:
- ☐ No frayed cords
- ☐ Outlets work properly
- ☐ GFCI outlets test/reset properly (bathroom, kitchen)
Structural:
- ☐ Handrails secure
- ☐ Steps in good condition
- ☐ No loose tiles or flooring
- ☐ No leaks or water damage
Outdoor:
- ☐ Walkways clear
- ☐ Lights working
- ☐ No tripping hazards
- ☐ Address numbers visible
What to Do When Something Happens
Despite all precautions, emergencies happen.
If Guest Gets Injured
Immediate steps:
- Make sure guest gets medical attention (call 911 if serious)
- Document everything (photos, written account, time/date)
- Don't admit fault ("I'm so sorry, are you okay?" not "This is my fault")
- Collect guest's account of what happened
- Call your insurance company immediately
- Call your lawyer if injury is serious
Don't: Offer to pay medical bills directly (let insurance handle it)
If There's a Fire
Guest protocol (post this):
- Get out immediately
- Call 911 from outside
- Don't go back in
- Meet at [designated spot]
Your protocol:
- Make sure all guests are safe
- Contact insurance immediately
- Coordinate with fire department
- Secure property
- Contact mortgage lender (they need to know)
- Document damage for insurance
If Carbon Monoxide Alarm Goes Off
Guest protocol (post this):
- Get outside immediately
- Call 911
- Don't re-enter until cleared by fire department
Your protocol:
- Contact gas company emergency line
- Don't let guests back in until property cleared
- Have HVAC company inspect system
- Replace CO detector if faulty
Never: Tell guests it's "probably just a dead battery." Treat every alarm as real.
Liability Protection Beyond Equipment
Safety equipment is step one. Here's step two:
1. Clear House Rules
Post rules about:
- No candles
- No smoking (including e-cigarettes)
- No leaving stove/oven unattended
- No overloading outlets
- Maximum occupancy (fire code)
Guests who violate rules? Document it.
2. Waiver in Booking Terms
Work with a lawyer to include:
- Assumption of risk language
- Limitation of liability
- Agreement to follow safety rules
This won't prevent lawsuits. But it helps in court.
3. Regular Professional Inspections
Annual inspections by licensed professionals:
- HVAC (heating, cooling, ventilation)
- Electrical (licensed electrician)
- Plumbing (licensed plumber)
- Structural (if concerns)
Keep records. Proves you maintained property properly.
4. Proper Insurance
- Required: STR liability insurance (minimum $1M)
- Smart: Umbrella policy ($1-2M additional)
Common Safety Violations
What gets hosts fined or shut down:
- Expired smoke detectors: Older than 10 years
- Missing CO detectors: Required if gas appliances present
- Blocked exits: Furniture blocking doors/windows
- No fire extinguisher: Or expired/empty one
- Illegal bedroom: No egress window/door
- Extension cords as permanent wiring: Fire hazard
- Space heaters: Not allowed in most STR permits
- Non-GFCI outlets: Required in bathrooms/kitchens
How you get caught: City inspection, guest complaint, neighbor report, fire department visit
Final Thoughts: Safety Isn't Optional
One injury. One fire. One CO leak. That's all it takes.
Safety equipment saves lives. It also saves your business.
Don't skip it. Don't cheap out. Don't forget to maintain it.
Check everything monthly. Replace things on schedule. Keep records.
Sleep better at night.
Get Your Property Safety-Ready
Need a safety inspection for your Indianapolis STR?
We help property owners pass city inspections, identify safety issues, and set up maintenance systems to stay compliant.
What we do:
- Pre-inspection walkthrough
- Safety equipment installation
- Monthly inspection protocols
- Inspector coordination
Ready to maximize your property?
Let's talk about what Algu can do for your investment.
Schedule a Call