02/06/2026
Thankfully, experiences like this are rare. Most of our guests are kind, respectful, and incredibly easy to work with—and for that, we’re truly grateful. 🤎
5 red flag phrases entitled guests always use.
Most Airbnb hosts think bad guests are random.
They’re not.
Bad guests usually warn you before they even book.
The problem is…
Most hosts ignore the signs because they don’t want to lose the income.
So they say yes anyway.
Then comes:
• the refund drama
• the broken house rules
• the surprise extra guests
• the 1-star review from the difficult guest THEY approved
Here are 5 phrases red flag guests always use — and what they actually mean.
—
1. “Can we check in early? Like… 7 AM?”
This is not a request.
It’s a boundary test.
If they push your rules before booking,
they’ll push them harder after check-in.
Today: early check-in.
Tomorrow: late checkout.
Next: “Pwede po bang dagdag 4 guests?”
What to do:
Charge an early check-in fee immediately.
Serious guests respect rules.
Problematic guests disappear.
2. “Do you give discounts?”
Birthday.
Anniversary.
First time sa Airbnb.
Doesn’t matter.
Guests who negotiate before booking usually complain after checkout too.
“Mahina wifi.”
“Maliit pala yung room.”
“Pwede partial refund?”
They’re conditioning you to lower your standards.
Reply with this instead:
“We price fairly so every guest gets the same experience.”
Short.
Professional.
Done.
3. “We’ll mostly just sleep there.”
Huge red flag.
Guests who say this are usually preparing you for something.
Because respectful guests don’t need to minimize their presence.
But problematic guests do.
Translation:
“We might break rules, but we don’t want scrutiny.”
And somehow…
these are the same guests who suddenly invite visitors,
move furniture,
or turn your unit into a content studio.
Your move:
Ask directly:
“How many people will enter the property during the stay?”
Watch how defensive they get.
4. “Our last host was terrible…”
Careful.
Sometimes this is context.
But most of the time?
It’s a warning.
People who bring drama into every booking
usually bring drama into yours too.
You are a host.
Not customer support for unresolved trauma.
5. “My friend will book, but I’m staying.”
Automatic NO.
Third-party bookings remove accountability.
When something breaks?
“Hindi ako yung nag-book.”
When rules get violated?
“Di ko po alam.”
No accountability = high risk.
Your reply should always be:
“For safety, the person staying must be the one booking.”
Here’s the thing:
Not every booking is good business.
Some bookings cost you:
• sleep
• stress
• refunds
• bad reviews
• peace of mind
And peace of mind is expensive.
So next time a message feels off…
Don’t ignore it just because the calendar is empty.
Sometimes the most profitable booking…
is the one you declined.