Airbnb and Vacation Rental Scams
Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.
Vacation rental scams, often involving fake listings or hosts demanding payment outside of secure platforms, resulted in consumers reporting approximately $65 million in losses to the FTC since 2020.
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How It Works
Red Flags
- The host insists on communicating or accepting payment outside of the official Airbnb or rental platform.
- The rental price is significantly lower than comparable properties in the same area.
- The host pressures you to make a quick decision and pay a deposit immediately.
- The listing has few or no reviews, or the reviews are vague and generic.
- The host has a new, unverified profile or is unresponsive to specific questions about the property.
- The listing photos appear in a reverse image search under a different address or for-sale listing.
- Payment is demanded via wire transfer, gift cards, cryptocurrency, or cash payment apps, which offer no fraud protection.
What to Do If Targeted
- Immediately stop all communication with the suspected scammer.
- Contact your bank or credit card company to report the fraud and request a chargeback if possible. Payments made by credit card offer the most protection.
- Report the fraudulent listing and user profile directly to the vacation rental platform (e.g., Airbnb, Vrbo).
- File a report with the Federal Trade Commission at reportfraud.ftc.gov.
- Report the incident to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov.
- If you shared sensitive personal information like a Social Security number, visit identitytheft.gov to create a recovery plan.
How to Report It
- FTC — Report fraud, scams, and bad business practices to the Federal Trade Commission.
- FBI IC3 — File a complaint about any online crime with the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center.
- AARP — Call the AARP Fraud Watch Network Helpline for free support from trained fraud specialists at 877-908-3360.
- FCC — File a complaint about phone scams, robocalls, or unwanted calls with the Federal Communications Commission.
Key Statistics
- Since 2020, consumers have reported nearly 65,000 rental scams to the FTC, with total losses of approximately $65 million. — FTC 2025
- In 2023, the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) received 9,521 real estate crime reports, which includes rental scams, resulting in over $145 million in victim losses. — AARP 2024
- A Better Business Bureau study found that 43% of online shoppers have encountered a fake rental listing, and more than 5 million consumers have lost money to these scams. — BBB 2019
- About half of the people who reported a rental scam in the 12 months ending in June 2025 said the scam started with a fake ad on Facebook. — FTC 2025
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