Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
The Almighty Buck

Airbnb Now Shows the Full Price of Your Stay By Default (theverge.com) 38

Airbnb is rolling out a global update that displays the total cost of a stay upfront in search results. The only fee that won't be included are taxes. The Verge reports: The company first started showing the full price of its listings in some locations in 2019 after facing scrutiny from the European Union over how it displays its fees. It later launched a toggle in the US and hundreds of other countries that shows the total cost of a stay across Airbnb's search results, individual listings pages, and other areas of the platform.

Airbnb says nearly 17 million people have used the toggle since its launch in 2022, and now, you won't have to worry about turning the option on when making a search. Instead, you'll now see a banner at the very top of your search results that says, "Prices include all fees."

Airbnb Now Shows the Full Price of Your Stay By Default

Comments Filter:
  • Why NOT INCLUDE the cost of tax?

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by jsonn ( 792303 )
      It would confuse Americans?
    • by smap77 ( 1022907 )

      It would be an additional pricing disadvantage to hotels which display neither taxes nor resort fees nor any other fees?

      • What hotels don't display all taxes and fees when booking?

      • Yeah, zero fucks given about that. Inclusion of all fees, surcharges, gratuities, and service fees, taxes, et cetera, in the displayed and advertised prices should be mandatory across the board in all cases. I don't give a goddamn if it's a retail store, a hotel, a restaurant, a gas station, a ride share, or any other business. Go ahead and include a detailed breakdown of the price if you want to bitch to the customer about the cost of business going up because you are being required to be a responsible

    • Those stupid tourists don't have any idea what the real taxes are anyway.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Why NOT INCLUDE the cost of tax?

      Computing taxes in the USA is extremely complicated, and the inputs change constantly on the whim of the governments at every level. You need a full-time staff of experts just to keep up with it. I imagine that's why Airbnb just punts.

      • Re:Tax (Score:4, Insightful)

        by coopertempleclause ( 7262286 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @03:11AM (#65322429)
        They still have to calculate them at checkout.

        That's like saying 'oh shipping fees are very complicated, they change based on where you live and what you buy, so we're just not going to bother show them!'
        • Shipping cost is probably the one thing (other than sales tax if you haven't entered your address yet) that reasonably can't be shown as part of the product price. In addition to your address, different shipping methods and speeds have different costs, and you usually don't choose what you want until you're on the checkout page. If you're buying multiple items, the shipping cost may also be less than the total separate cost for each item (such as a second item that fits in the same size box as the first ite
          • That's fair, but sometimes you have listings that are e.g. $z each plus $(x * quantity + y) shipping. There are even cases like Amazon Marketplace where $y is zero (i.e. shipping is a flat "$3.99 per book", even from the same seller). Just add the $x into the price dammit!! If your shipping cost is a linear function of the quantity then you're just trying to hide some of the product price in the shipping.

            In some contexts it's fine to assume the cheapest shipping option and no combined shipping. eBay has a "

      • You need a full-time staff of experts just to keep up with it.

        It your argument is that it's too complicated for a computer and needs humans, then how does anyone, including Airbnb, manage to charge you the full price anyway when you click on BUY, without you asking a clerk on the phone?

        On every website, at any minute, if you click BUY and then you pay the full price with taxes. This means it was able to display the amount of taxes also before you clicked on BUY. Even if the taxes change every second, it's still able to display the changes before you click BUY.

        • If I had to guess, web shops hide the total for things like tax and shipping for two reasons. First, billing address is one of the inputs to tax calculation. A lot of customers are reluctant to divulge their billing address until the last step of checkout. Second, sales tax calculation service providers charge the merchant per query. Spending the cost of one query per page view throughout the ordering process rather than at checkout would probably noticeably reduce the merchant's margin.

          • That's only true if you're shipping.

            The tax on a hotel room does not depend on your billing address, only the location of the hotel room.

          • First, billing address is one of the inputs to tax calculation.

            It could guess based on the IP geolocation. When I visit electronic components websites like mouser, digikey, farnell (US sellers, I am not in teh US), even through a direct link to a specific item, the first thing it does is pop-up and asks is which version I want to see: USA, EU, $MY_COUNTRY (based on IP geolocation). A list of countries is often located topright corner of merchant websites.
            In the case of US states, it could guess based on IP, and any mistake could be corrected at checkout time, or throug

            • I wouldn't be entirely certain that IP address geolocation is adequate to provide an estimate of sales tax by subnational entities, such as state, county, and city tax, that is accurate enough not to mislead the customer. I routinely get geolocated to cities 100 miles (160 km) away from my home until I key in my postal code.

              On the other hand, as registrations_suck pointed out, the situation differs between physical goods and services. As I understand it, sales tax on physical goods and download services is

      • Sounds like a them problem, not a customer problem.
      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        I did support and installs for a European company which was trying to break into the US market for restaurant point of sale systems. They were able to adjust their program for individual state taxes, but when we informed them that many locations had county, city and even township taxes which would vary from one restaurant to another in the same chain they threw up their hands and gave up. They were planning a major re-write of the program and said they would add those to the new version. I left the compa

        • It doesn't seem like a big deal to have a management screen to allow the local manager to enter these tax rates. Every Mom and Pop restaurant does it.
          • by cusco ( 717999 )

            It was going to be a rewrite of the database structure to add the additional fields, and they contracted DB work since they didn't have anyone on staff. They were using some outdated Soviet DB system, which they wanted to replace, so they figured it best to do everything at once.

    • by recjhl ( 840587 )

      Here (in Denmark), you have to include ALL costs, including tax.
      I think it is the same in all of EU.

    • Why NOT INCLUDE the cost of tax?

      Because taxes are subject to change at the whim of local governments (usually in the form of additional taxes, or taxes expiring or being suspended.) The "tax rate" is actually a combination of several different taxes, each with a start and expiration date (and possibly a suspension for certain events). They are announced and published in advance (usually quarterly, but some announcements go out monthly) and can vary significantly based on government desire for more income or to encourage attendance at ce

  • This was always so scammy and it messed up any apples to apples comparisons. "oh just $60 a night sounds like a good deal...$1500 cleaning fee".

    • This was always so scammy and it messed up any apples to apples comparisons. "oh just $60 a night sounds like a good deal...$1500 cleaning fee".

      A trick that worked for years was going to the Australian site to browse listings in the US, because their laws required the price including fees. Convert your price range to Australian dollars and set the filters, then go back to the American site to book.

  • by aicrules ( 819392 ) on Monday April 21, 2025 @09:59PM (#65322175)
    Now make cable companies and everyone else who does this shit also. I will never pay for Spectrum again but the idea that they can advertise 29.99 even as a promotional monthly rate when in reality there are fees that WILL be charged including "Broadcast TV Surcharge" fee which is nearly as much as the 29.99 by itself making it a minimum of $60 a month and then naturally you have to rent a cable box from them for $15 a month so it's $75 a month minimum for a $29.99 plan. Total bullcrap.
  • by 278MorkandMindy ( 922498 ) on Monday April 21, 2025 @11:13PM (#65322231)

    I assume third world countri... oh. It was the US, right?

  • Mandatory (Score:4, Insightful)

    by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Monday April 21, 2025 @11:19PM (#65322237)

    This should be mandatory standard practice for ALL industries. My ISP, Omni Fiber, charges exactly what they advertise. I was skeptical at first, verifying a few times with the company before switching. I'll be damned, for over a year now that EXACT SAME PRICE. No hidden fees, no gotchas. And the best part, they are less than half of the cost of the local cable ISP.

    • That's so obvious; the EU did that years ago already.
      • That's not entirely true for hotels. Many cities have a small tourist tax, something like 2 euros per night per guest (depends on the city), which many hotels charge on arrival. It's not much but it's annoying to have to pay it on arrival, they should have added it to the online system. Sources on the internet said there was no obligation to do this way, it's just more practical for their accounting to charge the tourist tax separately from the other things. A recent review of these local taxes https://www. [euronews.com]

  • I'm a host, and have been for many years. This really should have been the default all along.

  • by PoopMelon ( 10494390 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @12:11AM (#65322277)
    It takes too much % cut from the rent, does not display real prices (ALL competition displays full price, including tax), it has made up joke fees like cleaning and additional service fee, it does not show real location which is CRUCIAL when planning a holiday because of transfers/cafes/neghbourhood, you need to manually hack get url parameters in order to filter amenities. seriosly, there is no single thing at which airbnb doesn't suck when compared to other hotel competitors like booking/agoda/rakuten/trivago/etc

"Well, social relevance is a schtick, like mysteries, social relevance, science fiction..." -- Art Spiegelman

Working...