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28th June 2022
02:16pm BST

"This was concerning to us due to both the disruptive nature of unauthorised parties and the risk of such gatherings spreading the virus," Airbnb's statement reads.
"As such, we announced the party ban to our community as being in the best interest of public health."
Since then though, the company says the ban has become "much more" than a public health measure and has developed into "a bedrock community policy to support our hosts and their neighbours".
Airbnb also believes there is a direct correlation between its implementation of the policy in August 2020 and a 44% year-over-year drop in the rate of party reports globally.
In terms of how the permanent ban will work, disruptive parties and events will continue to be prohibited, including open-invite gatherings.
“Party house” properties will also continue to be banned as well.
The policy includes "serious consequences" for guests who attempt to violate these rules, varying from account suspension to full removal from the Airbnb platform.
In 2021, over 6,600 guests were suspended for trying to violate the party ban.
However, while the temporary ban included a 16-person occupancy cap, the updated policy will remove this.
This is to allow the hosts of larger properties that "thrive on hosting multi-generational family trips and larger groups" to responsibly utilise the space in their homes while still complying with the party ban.
"In 2020 when we first announced the temporary policy, we noted plans to scope a potential exception process for specialty and traditional hospitality venues, and those plans are still under consideration," Airbnb added.Explore more on these topics: