Skip to content
×
PRO
Pro Members Get Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
$0
TODAY
$39.00/month when billed monthly.
$32.50/month when billed annually.
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here

Join Over 3 Million Real Estate Investors

Create a free BiggerPockets account to comment, participate, and connect with over 3 million real estate investors.
Use your real name
By signing up, you indicate that you agree to the BiggerPockets Terms & Conditions.
The community here is like my own little personal real estate army that I can depend upon to help me through ANY problems I come across.
Short-Term & Vacation Rental Discussions
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

User Stats

69
Posts
68
Votes
Cory T.
  • San Francisco, CA
68
Votes |
69
Posts

Evicting renter from a vacation rental property

Cory T.
  • San Francisco, CA
Posted

Hello All,

I have a one-bedroom vacation rental condo in Palm Springs that has been listed on AirBnB for about a year now. I have my first stressful problem: a vacation renter with a 44 day reservation who will NOT leave now that the reservation has expired. (Payment was received for first 30 days, but not for the remaining 14 days). This is all new, to me, and I believe I have a professional scammer on my hands.

Unfortunately Airbnb has not provided support, and is only helping me via email responses every 48 hours or so. The information from Airbnb has been confusing, convoluded and contradictory at best. The summary is that somehow Airbnb collected payment for the first 30 days rental, and was unable to collect payment for the remaining 14 days. The renter has been there 14 days without paying. Today is the date that this reservation expires. (Original reservation May 25-July 8th.)

The tenant is refusing to leave, and sent me a text message this morning that borders on blackmail. I believe he is a professional scammer, and I now need to hire an attorney.

Has anyone had to deal with a similiar situation, or have advice to offer? Does anyone have a landlord-tenant attorney recommendation for the Palm Springs area?

Thanks for reading, and thanks for potential suggestions/solutions. 

Sincerely,

Cory

User Stats

443
Posts
150
Votes
Karin Crompton
  • Rehabber
  • Niantic, CT
150
Votes |
443
Posts
Karin Crompton
  • Rehabber
  • Niantic, CT
Replied

Nice job, @Cory T. . I had a feeling airbnb would become more responsive as your story gained some traction. ;-) Glad to hear, too, that you'll be getting some help w/your legal fees!

I don't know if other media outlets have expressed interest in the story, but one thing I wish was included was some expanding upon what a landlord might do to avoid this situation. Same as a typical long-term landlord, I suppose - background and credit checks, etc. And I'd like to know if airbnb (and other vacation rental sites) might expand upon its education of rental owners to alert them to this possibility and some tips on how to protect themselves.

Way to keep fighting! Now back to your original battle w/the squatter...

Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
3,726
Votes |
6,037
Posts
Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
Replied

Glad to see the story up so soon.  And really glad to hear that airbnb has said, now publicly, that they will help with legal fees.

I wish the story had addressed the fact that airbnb only collects payment for 30 days at a time for longer stays. There may be legal reasons that they cannot collect the entire amount upfront, but if so I'd like to hear what there are.  Without a secure source of payment for the entire stay, a vacation rental becomes just like any other month to month rental if the guest's credit card or source of payment doesn't go through on Day 31.  Additionally the story doesn't cover how and why an unlawful detainer case is needed in such cases. 

Has your tenant been served yet?  

Hospitable logo
Hospitable
|
Sponsored
Free eBook: The Ultimate STR Guide Over 100 pages of focused knowledge to help you launch and scale your short-term rental business.

User Stats

69
Posts
68
Votes
Cory T.
  • San Francisco, CA
68
Votes |
69
Posts
Cory T.
  • San Francisco, CA
Replied

@k. 

@Account Closed UD was filed Thursday afternoon/posted today. 

User Stats

128
Posts
56
Votes
Susan Gillespie
  • Investor
  • Saint Paul, MN
56
Votes |
128
Posts
Susan Gillespie
  • Investor
  • Saint Paul, MN
Replied

@Cory T. Thanks for sharing your experience and nice job with the article. Please keep us up to date. There are lessons to be learned for many of us on this forum, and hopefully will result in positive changes regarding awareness and protection of tenant and owner rights.

I wish you the best as you work to resolve this. On the bright side, your experience is growing exponentially. 

Susan

User Stats

79
Posts
25
Votes
Brandon Luke
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Yakima, WA
25
Votes |
79
Posts
Brandon Luke
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Yakima, WA
Replied

Wow, I hear stories like these, and it's hard to think anyone would do that! It's a reminder that even though I consider myself an honest person, not everyone is. Thank you for sharing your experience, so we can all learn an hopefully avoid similar situations. I know everyone here is pulling for you!

User Stats

3,280
Posts
3,063
Votes
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
3,063
Votes |
3,280
Posts
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
Replied

Front page of sfgate

User Stats

1
Posts
3
Votes
Paul Grahamm
  • San Diego, CA
3
Votes |
1
Posts
Paul Grahamm
  • San Diego, CA
Replied

I'm in real estate and was able to locate the owner's condo. It's part of a HOA. The HOA's CCRs forbids leases for "transient or hotel purposes." The typical meaning of this is leases of under 30 days. The CCRs also require that permitted leases be in writing.

The sfgate article says that the owner was renting this out for $450/week to help cover her mortgage and expenses so it is probable that some of her activity was in violation of the CCRs. It also sounds like she didn't actually have a written lease with the squatter tenant who booked a 44 day reservation and therefore has tenants rights.

I am not a fan of AirBNB but AirBNB doesn't deserve blame for this. This owner thought it would be cool to become a real estate investor and she didn't know what she was doing. Now shes paying the price...

User Stats

3,280
Posts
3,063
Votes
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
3,063
Votes |
3,280
Posts
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
Replied

Did you read this comment?

"If the Airbnb screenpic of the renter since removed by SFGate was correct the "tenant" is a software engineer from Austin TX whose experience includes "Global platform for web applications that allows to manage bookings for property owners and supports online-booking by travelers"(indeed.com) . Interesting since he presumably works for SoftServe (linkedin.com) the Ukranian company who handled the web development of Airbnb's competitor HomeAway. "

There may be more to this than just a squatter, if the above is correct

User Stats

910
Posts
889
Votes
Johnson H.
Pro Member
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
889
Votes |
910
Posts
Johnson H.
Pro Member
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
Replied

@Cory T. - Great job with the article! Keep the pressure on Airbnb and I hope everything works out for you.

User Stats

2,732
Posts
1,431
Votes
Joe Fairless
Pro Member
  • Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
1,431
Votes |
2,732
Posts
Joe Fairless
Pro Member
  • Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
Replied

@cory 

@Cory T. thank you for sharing your experience. I came across this thread today and it is truly eye opening about AirBnB, 30-day agreements and professional tenants. I know I learned a lot and I hope this this resolved shortly. 

User Stats

2,295
Posts
1,707
Votes
Rob K.
  • Investor
  • Southeast, MI
1,707
Votes |
2,295
Posts
Rob K.
  • Investor
  • Southeast, MI
Replied
Originally posted by @Cory T.:

FYI Article in SF Gate:

http://www.sfgate.com/default/article/Squatters-do...

Did anyone read the comments under the article? What a bunch of simpletons responding. I'm amazed that some of them even know how to read and write........

User Stats

3,280
Posts
3,063
Votes
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
3,063
Votes |
3,280
Posts
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
Replied
Originally posted by @Rob K.:

Did anyone read the comments under the article? What a bunch of simpletons responding. I'm amazed that some of them even know how to read and write........

Yeah, it's amazing how many of them 'know' that there's a difference between a 29 day rental and a 30 day rental and are chastizing her for not knowing. I think many of them are jealous, because they don't own

PropStream logo
PropStream
|
Sponsored
Nationwide property data Use our robust, multi-sourced data to find off-market properties and close your next deal.

User Stats

69
Posts
68
Votes
Cory T.
  • San Francisco, CA
68
Votes |
69
Posts
Cory T.
  • San Francisco, CA
Replied

@Michaela G. Yes, this "situation" is unfortunately complex... there is more to the story than I've shared here, and much more than what SF Chron reported. And now we have a Venture Capitalist attempting to high-jack this thread for character assassination. Yuck!

User Stats

3,280
Posts
3,063
Votes
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
3,063
Votes |
3,280
Posts
Michaela G.
  • Investor
  • Atlanta, GA
Replied

If it proves itself to be a scam by a competitor to make airbnb look bad, then I doubt that airbnb will just roll over and play dead. I bet they would file a lawsuit against that competitor for damages and you should be part of that lawsuit and get something as well. 

Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
3,726
Votes |
6,037
Posts
Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
Replied
Originally posted by @Paul Grahamm:

I'm in real estate and was able to locate the owner's condo. It's part of a HOA. The HOA's CCRs forbids leases for "transient or hotel purposes." The typical meaning of this is leases of under 30 days. The CCRs also require that permitted leases be in writing.

The sfgate article says that the owner was renting this out for $450/week to help cover her mortgage and expenses so it is probable that some of her activity was in violation of the CCRs. It also sounds like she didn't actually have a written lease with the squatter tenant who booked a 44 day reservation and therefore has tenants rights.

I am not a fan of AirBNB but AirBNB doesn't deserve blame for this. This owner thought it would be cool to become a real estate investor and she didn't know what she was doing. Now shes paying the price...

You say you're not fan?  Does that mean you are not the same Paul Grahamm that funded airbnb's start-up?  And you signed up just to make this post.  Must be a coincidence.

This thread is focused on airbnb customer service in a non-paying guest situation. Airbnb doesn't dispute the facts. It's definitely on them. It's the condo association's job to go after the OP for violating any CCRs, the City of Palm Springs and the County of Riverside's job to go after her for any licensing issues and/or code violations, and the tax collector's job to go after her for any taxes due. Without any of the facts, I'd not concern yourself about the OP's situation with the HOA.

User Stats

8,666
Posts
4,013
Votes
Jon Klaus
  • Developer
  • Garland, TX
4,013
Votes |
8,666
Posts
Jon Klaus
  • Developer
  • Garland, TX
Replied
Originally posted by @Michaela G.:
Originally posted by @Rob K.:

Did anyone read the comments under the article? What a bunch of simpletons responding. I'm amazed that some of them even know how to read and write........

Yeah, it's amazing how many of them 'know' that there's a difference between a 29 day rental and a 30 day rental and are chastizing her for not knowing. I think many of them are jealous, because they don't own

 Professional tenants know the difference between 29 and 30 day occupancies. 

User Stats

98
Posts
10
Votes
Andrew Whicker
  • Investor
  • Ogden, UT
10
Votes |
98
Posts
Andrew Whicker
  • Investor
  • Ogden, UT
Replied

I can't believe they are (partially?) paying your legal fees.  They must feel very pressured by the media.  

I guess if you are Airbnb you have to pick your battles, but I'll just say that paying your legal fees seems way above and beyond.  It's the property owner's requirement to know the local laws and pay the consequences of not knowing.  Maybe I mis-understand Airbnb's role in vacation rentals, I thought they were little more than a marketplace.

And now theorizing that there is some competitor thing going on and the property owner needs to be involved in a lawsuit in order to get some money?  

I'm going to stop following this thread because I think it is going in an unhealthy direction.  Good luck and I hope everything works out for the best.

Cheers,

Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
3,726
Votes |
6,037
Posts
Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
Replied

I think only one person on this thread is theorizing about airbnb competitors and additional law suits.  I don't the think the OP is interested in going that route.  She wants her unit back without the squatter, hopefully with minimal damage.

Anyone who's signed up to be a host on airbnb can confirm that its very rah-rah-this-so-easy and that you shouldn't have any worries because we have a $1M guarantee. Most people don't think they are governed by landlord/tenant laws when letting someone use their property as a vacation rental. It's not intuitive. Airbnb isn't disclosing the issue in bold print for their supposedly much beloved customers because it's not in their best interest.  That will change very soon, I think, at least in CA. Even with the known risk of legal tenant issues (it's very minimal), many, many people will continue to be airbnb hosts.

User Stats

26
Posts
12
Votes
Daniel S.
  • Oakland, CA
12
Votes |
26
Posts
Daniel S.
  • Oakland, CA
Replied

Sorry to here about this Cory... Just a minor setback. Glad you are getting all this help and exposure, and that we can learn from it too. I thought your lawyer was going to serve a 30 or 60 day notice? How was the UD served so quickly? I presume the lawyer must have determined the 3-day notice was sufficient and the 30-60 day not necessary.  

Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
3,726
Votes |
6,037
Posts
Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
Replied
Originally posted by @Daniel S.:

Sorry to here about this Cory... Just a minor setback. Glad you are getting all this help and exposure, and that we can learn from it too. I thought your lawyer was going to serve a 30 or 60 day notice? How was the UD served so quickly? I presume the lawyer must have determined the 3-day notice was sufficient and the 30-60 day not necessary.  

Cory hasn't been paid by the squatter since July 8.  You can post and mail a 3-day pay or quit the first day the rent is past due.  If they don't pay in 3 days you can file the UD.  If the goal is to vacate the unit, it's a good idea to post the 30-day (or 60 day) termination of tenancy notice at the same time as the 3 day pay or quit, just in case the tenant pays. At least that's the way we do it.  It's not cut and dried and nothing is certain.  After being served the unlawful detainer, the defendant has 5 days to answer or the judge will award the landlord a default judgment.  If they answer (and pay the court fee), it will put the case on the calendar which buys them more time.

Account Closed
  • Dallas, TX
744
Votes |
4,988
Posts
Account Closed
  • Dallas, TX
Replied

I believe if you contacted the local news they might be interested and let @Paul Grahamm know that the news media like to question him about his uneducated remarks which I doubt he would show up. Who knows Paul might work for AirBNB.

Joe Gore

User Stats

31
Posts
3
Votes
Juliette V.
  • Nashville, TN
3
Votes |
31
Posts
Juliette V.
  • Nashville, TN
Replied

So how did this all end?

Steadily logo
Steadily
|
Sponsored
America’s best-rated landlord insurance nationwide Quotes online in minutes. Single-family, fix n’ flips, short-term rentals, and more. Great prices.
Account Closed
  • CA
182
Votes |
762
Posts
Account Closed
  • CA
Replied
Originally posted by @Account Closed:
Originally posted by @Daniel S.:

Sorry to here about this Cory... Just a minor setback. Glad you are getting all this help and exposure, and that we can learn from it too. I thought your lawyer was going to serve a 30 or 60 day notice? How was the UD served so quickly? I presume the lawyer must have determined the 3-day notice was sufficient and the 30-60 day not necessary.  

Cory hasn't been paid by the squatter since July 8.  You can post and mail a 3-day pay or quit the first day the rent is past due.  If they don't pay in 3 days you can file the UD.  If the goal is to vacate the unit, it's a good idea to post the 30-day (or 60 day) termination of tenancy notice at the same time as the 3 day pay or quit, just in case the tenant pays. At least that's the way we do it.  It's not cut and dried and nothing is certain.  After being served the unlawful detainer, the defendant has 5 days to answer or the judge will award the landlord a default judgment.  If they answer (and pay the court fee), it will put the case on the calendar which buys them more time.

 You're usually right K but I'm not sure I'd give the 30/60 day notice at all. I can just see in court the tenant claiming either they didn't get the 3 day notice and were proceeding under the 30/60 day notice, or they were confused by the mixed notices and choose to follow the landlord's direction under the 30/60 day (but of course never leave and never pay, only to buy time). UD judges can be pretty nutty sometimes.

Reminds me of a movie I saw about how President Kennedy handled the Bay of Pigs incident, he got two separate messages from the Russians and choose the one he liked best and denied receipt of the other...it worked.

Account Closed
  • Dallas, TX
744
Votes |
4,988
Posts
Account Closed
  • Dallas, TX
Replied

It is best to let the sheriff's office delivery the three-day notice, and yes they do charge but the tenant cannot say they never receive it.


Joe Gore

Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
3,726
Votes |
6,037
Posts
Account Closed
  • Investor
  • Central Valley, CA
Replied
Originally posted by @Account Closed:
Originally posted by @Account Closed:
Originally posted by @Daniel S.:

Sorry to here about this Cory... Just a minor setback. Glad you are getting all this help and exposure, and that we can learn from it too. I thought your lawyer was going to serve a 30 or 60 day notice? How was the UD served so quickly? I presume the lawyer must have determined the 3-day notice was sufficient and the 30-60 day not necessary.  

Cory hasn't been paid by the squatter since July 8.  You can post and mail a 3-day pay or quit the first day the rent is past due.  If they don't pay in 3 days you can file the UD.  If the goal is to vacate the unit, it's a good idea to post the 30-day (or 60 day) termination of tenancy notice at the same time as the 3 day pay or quit, just in case the tenant pays. At least that's the way we do it.  It's not cut and dried and nothing is certain.  After being served the unlawful detainer, the defendant has 5 days to answer or the judge will award the landlord a default judgment.  If they answer (and pay the court fee), it will put the case on the calendar which buys them more time.

 You're usually right K but I'm not sure I'd give the 30/60 day notice at all. I can just see in court the tenant claiming either they didn't get the 3 day notice and were proceeding under the 30/60 day notice, or they were confused by the mixed notices and choose to follow the landlord's direction under the 30/60 day (but of course never leave and never pay, only to buy time). UD judges can be pretty nutty sometimes.

Reminds me of a movie I saw about how President Kennedy handled the Bay of Pigs incident, he got two separate messages from the Russians and choose the one he liked best and denied receipt of the other...it worked.

On this topic, I'm not usually right.  My success rate on fast and easy evictions is 50%.  The other 50% ranges from eventual cash-for-keys with PITA tenants/squatters to 60+ days and property damage.  Property damage tends to come with the territory for a lot of the stuff I buy though.

I misspoke above.  At the time the OP's squatter was supposed to be gone, I would have posted just a notice to quit.  Not a quit or pay.  The reason to post a 30-day at the same time as the notice to quit is so you don't have to start over if the tenant answers the UD complaint with a some kind of defense the court will consider.  The OPs squatter could answer the complaint with some weirdness about a verbal agreement about staying longer, or counter claim harassment, or bring totally crap fabricated evidence to court. If he prevails, I'd want to make sure that the 30-day termination was in place so I could file a new UD at the end of the 30 days,  if I had to. Again, that's the way I've done it so far.  

Can someone mention Aaron Mazzrillo? I'm guessing he has some strategies as I'm sure he's vacated more holdover tenants than me.