Guest Experience

How to Screen Airbnb Guests (Red Flags + Real Stories)

June 3, 2026

Pro tip: Hospitable shows you the guest's profile photo even when Airbnb hides it. It's a small thing, but seeing who you're talking to before accepting a booking makes a real difference.

Introduction

Here's what most new hosts do.

Someone wants to book. They click "Accept." Done.

Then the guest shows up with 8 extra people. Or throws a party. Or trashes the place. Or leaves a bad review because they booked the wrong property type.

Screening guests isn't about being difficult. It's about protecting your property and avoiding problems before they start.

We manage 50+ properties in Indianapolis. We've learned to spot red flags. Some the hard way.

Here's how to screen guests, what to look for, and when to decline a booking.

The Red Flags (What to Watch For)

These patterns show up before problems do.

Red Flag #1: Brand New Account, No Reviews

What it looks like:

  • Account created today or this week
  • Zero reviews as a guest
  • Minimal profile info
  • No photo

Why it's a flag: Could be legitimate first-time user. Or could be someone who got banned and created new account.

What to do:

  • Ask why they're new to Airbnb
  • Request government ID verification
  • Ask about their trip purpose
  • If booking locally? Extra caution (possible party)

When to decline: New account + local booking + vague answers about trip = probably decline

Red Flag #2: Local Booking (Same City)

What it looks like:

  • Guest lives 15 minutes away
  • Booking your property in their own city

Why it's a flag: Why does someone need an STR in their own city? Common reasons:

  • Party/event (your property gets trashed)
  • Cheating spouse (drama potential)
  • House being renovated (could be legitimate)
  • Kicked out of their place (problem tenant)

What to do:

Message: "I noticed you're booking locally. Can you tell me about your plans?"

Legitimate answers: "My house is being fumigated," "Family visiting and need extra space," "Romantic staycation"

Suspicious answers: Vague, defensive, or "Why does it matter?"

When to decline: Won't explain reason, defensive tone, or mentions party/gathering

Red Flag #3: Trying to Negotiate Price

What it looks like:

  • "Can you do $80 instead of $150?"
  • "I'll book multiple nights if you give me a discount"
  • "I'm a student, can you help me out?"

Why it's a flag: Shows they don't respect your pricing. Often correlates with not respecting house rules.

What to do:

Polite decline: "My pricing is set based on market rates. Thanks for inquiring!"

Don't negotiate (sets bad precedent)

Exception: Long-term bookings (28+ days) can justify discounts. But let them book first, don't negotiate before.

Red Flag #4: Asks to Book for "Friends" or "Family"

What it looks like:

  • "I'm booking for my cousin"
  • "This is for my friend's birthday"
  • "My sister is visiting"

Why it's a flag: Third-party bookings create accountability problems. Who do you contact if there's an issue? The person who booked isn't even there.

What to do:

Airbnb policy: The person booking should be staying at the property

Message: "Airbnb requires the account holder to be present. Can your [friend/cousin/sister] book directly?"

When to decline: They insist on third-party booking

Red Flag #5: Vague or No Communication

What it looks like:

  • You ask questions, they don't answer
  • One-word responses
  • Won't confirm trip purpose
  • Ignores your messages until booking confirmation

Why it's a flag: Good guests communicate. Bad guests avoid it.

What to do:

Ask direct questions before accepting Instant Book or inquiry

If they don't respond within 24 hours? Decline.

Red Flag #6: Mentions "Party," "Gathering," "Event"

What it looks like:

  • "Great space for a small gathering!"
  • "Perfect for my friend's birthday celebration"
  • "Can we have people over?"

Why it's a flag: Even "small gathering" = party = neighbors complaining = damage = bad reviews

What to do:

Clear response: "No parties or events allowed per house rules and Airbnb policy."

If they push back? Decline.

When to decline: Any mention of party, event, or gathering

Red Flag #7: Guest Count Doesn't Match Story

What it looks like:

  • Books for 2 people
  • Messages: "Also bringing my kids and parents"
  • Shows up with 8 people

Why it's a flag: Avoiding extra guest fees, planning party, or doesn't respect house rules

What to do:

Before accepting: "I see you're booking for 2. Who will be staying?"

If numbers change: "You'll need to update booking to reflect actual guest count."

When to decline: Won't confirm actual guest count or tries to hide it

Red Flag #8: Asks to Pay Outside Airbnb

What it looks like:

  • "Can I pay you directly and save the fees?"
  • "I'll Venmo you instead"
  • "Let's do this off the platform"

Why it's a flag: Scam. Or trying to avoid Airbnb's protection. Either way, bad.

What to do:

  • Decline immediately
  • Report to Airbnb
  • Do NOT engage

Always: Keep payments on platform. Zero exceptions.

The Good Signs (Green Flags)

What good guests look like:

Green Flag #1: Established account with multiple positive reviews

Green Flag #2: Clear communication about trip purpose

  • "Visiting for my daughter's college graduation"
  • "Business trip, need quiet workspace"
  • "Anniversary weekend getaway"

Green Flag #3: Asks thoughtful questions

  • "Is there parking available?"
  • "What's the WiFi speed?"
  • "Are there restaurants within walking distance?"

Green Flag #4: Profile is complete

  • Real photo
  • Verified ID
  • Bio written out
  • Connected to social media

Green Flag #5: Books appropriate property for their needs

  • Family books family-friendly space
  • Business traveler books workspace-equipped property
  • Couple books romantic getaway spot

Questions to Ask Before Accepting

These questions help you screen without being invasive:

Question 1: "What brings you to Indianapolis?"

Good answers:

  • "Visiting family"
  • "Here for a conference"
  • "Exploring the city for the weekend"

Red flag answers:

  • Vague: "Just hanging out"
  • Defensive: "Why do you need to know?"
  • Lie that doesn't match dates: "Business trip" but booking Friday-Sunday

Question 2: "Have you stayed in Airbnbs before?"

Good answers:

  • "Yes, many times!" (check their reviews)
  • "First time, excited to try it!" (genuine, not defensive)

Red flag answers:

  • "Yeah" (no elaboration, seems evasive)
  • No answer

Question 3: "Will anyone else be joining you?"

Good answers:

  • Matches guest count in booking
  • "Just me and my partner"
  • Updates booking if count changes

Red flag answers:

  • Vague: "Maybe a few friends"
  • Evasive: "Probably just me"
  • Changes story multiple times

Real Examples: When We Said No

Here are actual bookings we declined:

Example 1: The "Birthday Party" Request

Inquiry: "Love your place! Perfect for my friend's 21st birthday this weekend. Can 15 people fit?"

Our listing: Max 6 guests. No parties rule clearly posted.

Our response: "Thanks for your interest! Our max occupancy is 6 guests, and we don't allow parties or events per house rules and Airbnb policy. Best of luck finding the right space!"

Why we declined: Obvious party. 15 people in a 6-person property = damage, noise complaints, bad scene.

Example 2: The Local "Staycation"

Inquiry: New account. No reviews. Lives 10 minutes away. Booking Saturday night only.

Our message: "I noticed you're local. Can you tell me about your plans?"

Their response: "Just need a place to hang out with some friends."

Our response: Declined with no explanation through Airbnb.

Why we declined: Local + new account + Saturday night + "hang out with friends" = party

Example 3: The Price Negotiator

Inquiry: "Hey, I see you're at $180/night. I have $100 budget. Can you work with me?"

Our response: "My pricing is based on market rates and covers costs. Thanks for inquiring!"

Their follow-up: "Come on, help a college student out!"

Our response: Declined through Airbnb.

Why we declined: Negotiating price = won't respect other boundaries

Example 4: The Third-Party Booker

Inquiry: "I'm booking this for my cousin who's visiting from out of town."

Our response: "Airbnb policy requires the person who books to be present at the property. Can your cousin create an account and book directly?"

Their response: "She doesn't have an account and I already have one, so it's easier this way."

Our response: "I understand, but I need the actual guest to book. Thanks!"

Why we declined: Third-party = no accountability if issues arise

When to Use Instant Book vs Manual Approval

Instant Book: Guest books without your approval

Manual Approval: You review and accept each request

Use Instant Book if:

  • You have strict requirements set (verified ID, positive reviews, etc.)
  • You want maximum bookings
  • You're comfortable with Airbnb's filters catching problems

Use Manual Approval if:

  • You're new to hosting (learn to spot red flags)
  • Property in residential neighborhood (neighbors matter)
  • High-value property (more at risk)
  • You've had problems before

Our approach: Manual approval for first 10-20 bookings. Then switch to Instant Book with filters once you understand your guest profile.

How to Decline Without Penalty

Declining bookings can hurt your acceptance rate. Here's how to protect it:

If it's an Inquiry (Not a Booking Request):

  • Just stop responding (no penalty)
  • Or send polite decline message

If it's a Booking Request:

  • You have 24 hours to accept or decline
  • Declining affects your acceptance rate
  • Too many declines = lower search ranking

Valid reasons to decline (no penalty):

  • Guest won't provide info you requested
  • Uncomfortable with the reservation
  • Guest violated your house rules in messages
  • Guest has bad reviews

Use this: Message guest first. Ask questions. Often they'll withdraw the request themselves if it's not a good fit.

What About Discrimination Laws?

You cannot decline based on:

  • Race
  • Religion
  • National origin
  • Disability
  • Sex
  • Familial status

You can decline based on:

  • Booking purpose (party vs legitimate stay)
  • Guest behavior (rude, demanding, sketchy communication)
  • Safety concerns (too many guests, third-party booking)
  • Past reviews (bad guest reviews)

The key: Decline based on behavior and booking details, not personal characteristics.

After You Accept: Setting Expectations

Good screening doesn't stop at acceptance.

Send this within 24 hours:

"Thanks for booking! A few reminders:

  • Check-in is at 3 PM, checkout at 11 AM
  • Max occupancy is [X] guests (strictly enforced)
  • No parties or events
  • Quiet hours 10 PM - 8 AM
  • Looking forward to hosting you!"

Why: Sets expectations. Creates paper trail. Guests know you're paying attention.

Final Thoughts: Trust Your Gut

If something feels off? It probably is.

Declining one booking is better than dealing with:

  • Property damage
  • Neighbor complaints
  • Bad reviews
  • Police showing up
  • Stress and headaches

You're not being difficult. You're protecting your business.

Screen guests. Ask questions. Decline when needed.

Your property will thank you.

Ready to Screen Guests Like a Pro?

Need help setting up guest screening systems?

We help Indianapolis STR owners create screening protocols, write effective messages, and identify red flags before they become problems.

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