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Airbnb’s Indoor Camera Ban: Essential Information for Guests and Hosts Before Booking

Airbnb's Indoor Camera Ban: Essential Information for Guests
While Airbnb has banned indoor cameras, Vrbo's policy does not (Credit: Alamy) While Airbnb has banned indoor cameras, Vrbo's policy does not (Credit: Alamy)
Airbnb's Indoor Camera Ban: Essential Information for Guests
While Airbnb has banned indoor cameras, Vrbo's policy does not (Credit: Alamy) While Airbnb has banned indoor cameras, Vrbo's policy does not (Credit: Alamy)

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Airbnb’s Indoor Camera Ban: Essential Information for Guests and Hosts Before Booking

Can travellers finally find holiday privacy with Airbnb’s new indoor camera ban? Here’s what security experts say:.

For travellers who have ever been concerned about being watched or potentially filmed while on holiday at an Airbnb rental, the company is trying to put those fears to rest. Airbnb announced on March 12, 2024, that a worldwide ban on all security cameras inside rental properties using their services would go into effect at the end of next month.

A representative for Airbnb said this change was made as part of efforts to simplify the brand’s policy on security cameras and other devices and continue to prioritize the privacy of the community. The new policy will take effect on April 30, allowing property owners time to adjust. Going forward, Airbnb claims it will take action against those who violate its policy, including removing hosts from the platform.

In the past, Airbnb has allowed security cameras in living spaces, such as hallways and living rooms, but not bedrooms and bathrooms, as long as they were disclosed to those staying in the home.

The unsettling effect of being watched I personally had the experience of staying in an Airbnb with cameras and found it startling. Several years ago, while on holiday with friends (including small children), I stayed in an Airbnb rental. It was during the fall, and we had a fire roaring. There weren’t many logs near the fire, so we went into the garage to look for additional cords. We found extra wood and brought a few pieces inside. Within an hour, we’d received a message from the owner that they’d seen us in the garage, which we were not to go into, and we’d be charged for the wood we’d taken.

To be fair, the host had noted this in the massive rule book they’d left. Airbnb cautions travellers to read the rules extensively; however, it did not change the fact that we all felt a bit spied upon. We checked the bathrooms and bedrooms carefully for cameras and left quickly the next morning.

“It worries me to think if we stay at an Airbnb, she could have been filmed or photographed without her consent and without knowing what happens to those files.” – Bridget Shrivell Bridget Shrivell, a property owner in Connecticut, US, who rents her own home on Airbnb, told us she doesn’t use cameras, and she’d prefer other owners didn’t either.

“As an Airbnb host, I don’t use indoor cameras or outdoor cameras,” Shrivell says.

She uses Airbnb as a traveller as well and says, “As an Airbnb guest, I’m happy Airbnb is banning indoor cameras. I find the practice creepy, and I have all sorts of privacy and tech concerns about how those images and videos are used.” As a parent who often travels with her child, Shrivell expressed additional concerns, “Especially as a mom who is already mindful of their child’s privacy on social media. It worries me to think that if we stay at an Airbnb, she could have been filmed or photographed without her consent and without knowing what happens to those files.”

Shrivell added that she doesn’t use cameras when renting out her own home for the same reason, explaining that “from a practical standpoint, as a host, I’ve never used them… I live in my house; it’s my primary residence that I rent out during select periods of the year, so I don’t want the cameras when we’re living in the home for the same concerns I mentioned as being a guest. I also try really hard to vet the people who stay in my house so that I wouldn’t feel like I needed a reason to have cameras.” What travellers should know before booking While Airbnb has banned indoor cameras, Vrbo’s policy does not. Vrbo does state, however, that cameras cannot be placed “where you have a reasonable expectation of privacy, such as the bathroom or bedroom” and requires that any cameras, even outdoors, be disclosed. Booking.com has the same policy.

Travelers are advised to read all the information provided by a property host on any site they may be booking through and check the policy of the site itself. If a traveller is feeling uncomfortable about a company’s camera policy, they should book elsewhere. Of course, there’s no guarantee that a host will disclose when they do have cameras in their home. Security expert Kent Moyer, president of the Worldwide Protection Group, advises his clients to avoid vacation rentals entirely for this reason.

“As a person who has a security mindset, that’s the first thing I think about,” Moyer says. “But an average person, what happens if all of a sudden they get the video footage or pictures of somebody, whatever they’re doing there, having sex or nude, and now post that on social media? So it’s an extreme problem. and the Airbnb company could be sued, the owner of the property could be sued as well for privacy, and [it] could even be some criminal thing that they could be held liable for.”

This may sound far-fetched, but just last year, a couple renting a Maryland Airbnb for a getaway had their private moments captured by the host on multiple cameras in the home. Issues like this—and the resulting lawsuits—are the most likely reason Airbnb has instituted the new policy.

To protect yourself, Moyer says, there are devices available that will help you find cameras within a rental. “You can buy devices that would detect if there is some type of hidden camera or a camera on the property… I highly recommend that you do [this search], even though there may be disclosures that there is no camera system or it’s turned off or whatever.”

More analog travellers can also do a slow and steady search of the property using a flashlight (your phone’s flashlight will work) and look for the glint of a camera eye. How owners should protect themselves Of course, most owners who install cameras on their rental properties probably aren’t trying to spy on their guests. Most are simply concerned about their property, says Moyer.

“The owner could be monitoring every time somebody’s renting his place… Are they going to trash it?” Moyer says. “Are they going to cause a problem or are they going to break something? Are they going to steal something?”

While privacy laws vary worldwide, Moyer and other experts say it’s unwise to point cameras at unsuspecting guests. A negative outcome could get you banned for life from Airbnb—or worse, sued and prosecuted.


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