Community standard

Anti-discrimination

A fair marketplace needs clear expectations. Good policy language is not enough unless guests can recognize bias, report it, and understand what equal access looks like in practice.

What to do now

Use the right next step before the issue gets harder to untangle.

Standards apply before booking too

Bias can show up in screening, replies, house-rule enforcement, or who receives flexibility during a dispute.

Focus on behavior, not assumptions

Reports are strongest when they describe what was said, done, or denied instead of guessing at intent.

Consistency is a host discipline

Use the same booking criteria, safety questions, and rule enforcement for everyone.

Recommended order

Three actions that keep the case clear.

  1. Write down the exact statement, action, or refusal that felt discriminatory.
  2. Save the booking request, message thread, or listing detail that supports the report.
  3. Submit a factual report and include what outcome would help resolve the issue.
Guided reading

Practical guidance for this topic.

Examples of unequal treatment travellers actually notice

Slower responses, inconsistent requirements, and refusal after identity is known can all erode trust.

How hosts can reduce accidental bias

Standardized check-in questions and documented house rules are easier to apply fairly.

What to include in a discrimination report

Screenshots, dates, names, and the reservation context make review faster and more credible.