Exclusive: Airbnb rolls out new anti-party tech to prevent unapproved gatherings

Airbnb is piloting new anti-party technology in the U.S. and Canada in its ongoing efforts to fend off users who are looking to book a house to throw large, unapproved gatherings.

The vacation rental company tells Fast Company the new tech is aimed at identifying “potentially high-risk reservations.” Airbnb will be looking at factors like a user’s history of positive reviews and history with the service, length of the requested booking, distance from their home to the booking, and whether it’s booked for a weekend or weekday.

Short-term rental platforms, like Airbnb and Vrbo, have long struggled with unauthorized parties taking place at bookings. The new tech is meant to flag and prevent suspect bookings from being sent to the host for approval, so homeowners can approve bookings without fear of property damage or noise complaints. People who have been blocked from booking an entire listing because of the new system will still be able to book a single room in a whole residence, since the host is more likely to be on the premise, or a hotel room.

“As we get more reservations and bookings, we look at how things are trending, how our metrics are trending,” says Naba Banerjee, Airbnb’s global head of product, operations, and strategy for trust and safety. “[W]e try to look at the rate of safety incidents, and we try to make sure that we are launching solutions that constantly try to work on that rate.”

Airbnb has been testing the tech in Australia since October 2021 and says it’s seen a 35% drop in unauthorized parties in areas where the pilot was in effect. The safety tool has rolled out nationwide in Australia and will now be tested in the U.S. and Canada. 

The latest update builds off the company’s “under-25” system, which blocks users under the age of 25 from booking entire properties close to where they live until they have at least three positive reviews. The company said in a statement that the new system is meant to prevent more party-seeking users from booking, “while having less of a blunt impact on guests who are not trying to throw a party.”

In 2019, Airbnb announced a ban on party houses (homes that are essentially listed for the sole purpose of hosting events) and announced a slew of safety features, after five people were killed in a shooting that took place at an Airbnb. In August 2020, as the pandemic spread across the globe, the company enacted a full ban on parties. 

Violence broke out again this April when two minors were killed from gunfire at a large party that was hosted at an Airbnb rental. And in June the company announced that it was codifying its global ban on “disruptive parties and events,” which include open-invite gatherings. Airbnb said at the time that since it implemented the party ban in August 2020, it saw a 44% year-over-year drop in the rate of party reports. In 2021, more than 6,600 guests were suspended from the platform for attempting to violate the party ban, the company added. 

Still, the hands-off nature of home rental companies’ platforms can make it extremely difficult to track when parties are taking place. Oftentimes, the owner of the listing won’t be on site at the property, so guests will check in remotely and often have free range to invite whomever they want. 

“We are, at the end of the day, an open marketplace, we are making real-world connections, and we are often a mirror of society. And no solution is 100% perfect,” Banerjee says. 

https://www.fastcompany.com/90779268/exclusive-airbnb-introduces-new-anti-party-tech-in-the-u-s-and-canada?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 3y | Aug 16, 2022, 8:21:06 PM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Genesys wants agentic AI to make customer service less robotic

When Tony Bates became chairman and CEO of Genesys in 2019, the company was already a global leader in contact center software. But Bates was determined

Jun 25, 2025, 2:20:04 PM | Fast company - tech
How a travel and expense platform is breaking ground on a zero-hallucinations AI workforce

AI hallucinations are one of users’ biggest concerns when utilizing larg

Jun 25, 2025, 11:50:06 AM | Fast company - tech
The AI baby boom is here. But can ChatGPT really raise a child?

Sam Altman is “extremely kid-pilled.”

The OpenAI CEO announced the birth of his son in February. Since then, Altman has employ

Jun 25, 2025, 11:50:05 AM | Fast company - tech
I’ve become an AI vibecoding convert

A few weeks ago, I finally paid for ChatGPT Plus.

It started with a simple goal: I wanted to create a personal archive of my published articles, but wasn’t sure how to begin. That led to

Jun 25, 2025, 9:40:03 AM | Fast company - tech
These are the top 10 emerging technologies of 2025, according to the World Economic Forum

Breakthroughs happen all the time in the tech world, but only a select few manage to make a lasting impact.

Predicting which innovations will shape the future is always a challenge. On T

Jun 25, 2025, 4:50:06 AM | Fast company - tech
Anthropic’s AI copyright ‘win’ is more complicated than it looks

Big tech scored a major victory this week in the battle over using copyrighted materials to train AI models. Anthropic

Jun 24, 2025, 7:40:06 PM | Fast company - tech
How Roblox handles millions of players on viral games like ‘Grow a Garden’

Just this past weekend, social and gaming platform Roblox saw a peak of 30.6 million concurrently active players, the

Jun 24, 2025, 5:30:02 PM | Fast company - tech