If you host on Airbnb long enough, you will file an AirCover claim. And if the statistics hold, you have a less than even chance of getting paid what you ask for.
A 2024 analysis by Avada Properties of more than 20,000 Airbnb bookings put the number at 43.25%. Nearly half of all damage claims submitted through AirCover get denied, reduced, or contested into oblivion. The losses are not small: the same analysis estimated $76 million to $456 million in uncovered damages per month across the global host base.
The good news is that the top reasons for denial are not random. They cluster into five specific failures — and every one of them is preventable with the right documentation workflow. This guide walks through each denial reason, explains how AirCover evaluates evidence, and shows exactly what a winning claim packet looks like.
Table of contents
Open Table of contents
The five reasons AirCover denies claims
1. Missing or weak before/after photos
The single most common reason for a denial is not missing damage — it’s missing proof that the property was undamaged before the guest arrived.
AirCover’s internal adjusters need a direct A/B comparison. A photo of a broken coffee table from the day of checkout is not evidence. It becomes evidence only when paired with a dated, timestamped photo of the same coffee table, intact, from before the check-in.
Most hosts take check-out photos reactively, after they notice damage. By then it is too late to establish a baseline. Without the before-photo, AirCover has no way to attribute the damage to the guest in question, and the “wear and tear” defense becomes very easy for Airbnb to invoke.
What a winning before/after photo looks like:
- Taken before the guest’s check-in (not hours after they leave)
- Shows the entire object or area, not just a fragment
- Captures any existing scuffs, marks, or small imperfections — so damage from this guest is clearly new
- Has visible, unaltered timestamp metadata (EXIF)
- Shot in the same lighting conditions as the check-out photo when possible
2. Missing the 14-day filing deadline
AirCover requires you to file a claim within 14 days of guest checkout or before the next guest checks in — whichever comes first. For busy hosts managing back-to-back bookings, this deadline is the single biggest hidden landmine.
Here’s what makes it worse: the clock starts at checkout, not when you notice the damage. If damage is hidden (inside a drawer, behind a piece of furniture, in a guest-marked “stain” that turns out to go deeper into the upholstery), you can easily burn a week before even filing. By day 10, most of the evidence window has already closed.
Once the 14-day deadline passes, AirCover will deny the claim on procedural grounds alone — regardless of how strong your evidence is.
What wins this:
- Automatic countdowns that start the moment a guest checks out
- Push reminders at the 7-day and 1-day marks
- A system that forces you to scan for damage before the next guest arrives
3. Photos stripped of EXIF metadata
This one is technical and catches almost every new host. Every photo your phone takes contains EXIF metadata: timestamp, camera model, sometimes GPS coordinates. This metadata is what proves the photo was actually taken when and where you claim.
The problem: messaging apps strip EXIF data. If you WhatsApp a photo to yourself, text it to your cleaner, or upload it to Facebook — all of that removes the very metadata AirCover uses to verify authenticity. By the time the photo reaches your claim, it is indistinguishable from a screenshot someone edited yesterday.
Airbnb’s fraud prevention team knows this. When photos arrive without EXIF data, the claim gets flagged as low-trust and routed to a stricter review path.
What wins this:
- Photos must go from camera straight to your evidence system
- No compression, no messaging intermediaries, no format conversion
- If you transfer photos between devices, use original-format file transfer (not image sharing)
4. No professional repair estimates
Airbnb will not reimburse a number you make up. Every damaged item requires a cost substantiation: a receipt (for replacement), a professional estimate (for repair), or a market valuation (for items you still use).
“I bought that couch for $1,500” is not enough. AirCover needs either:
- The original purchase receipt showing $1,500 (even better: proof it was in usable condition recently)
- A depreciation-adjusted current value (a 5-year-old couch is not worth $1,500)
- A professional repair quote if the couch can be salvaged
Hosts frequently submit total replacement values for items that have been in use for years. AirCover’s adjusters are trained to spot this and reduce payouts accordingly — sometimes drastically.
What wins this:
- A per-item asset inventory with purchase date, purchase price, and current condition
- Depreciation schedules calculated at the item level
- Repair estimates from vendors with invoice-style formatting
5. Unclear chain of evidence under guest dispute
When a guest disputes a claim — which happens on most claims over $300 — Airbnb shifts to an adjudication mode. Both sides submit their evidence, and AirCover’s team decides whose narrative is more credible.
This is where most claims collapse. The host has dozens of photos, but no clear timeline: which photo was taken when, by whom, and in what order? The guest submits a single confident statement (“I left the unit in perfect condition”) and the burden flips back to the host.
What wins adjudication is not more photos. It is a chain of custody: a documented, timestamped sequence showing exactly when each piece of evidence was created, who touched it, and how it moves from capture to claim.
What wins this:
- An immutable audit trail: every photo, note, and action logged with timestamp
- SHA256 hashes on every image, computed at capture time, so tampering is mathematically excluded
- Per-issue evidence bundles (not a giant folder of random photos)
What a winning claim packet looks like
If you combine everything above, here is what a defensible AirCover claim looks like when submitted:
Cover page:
- Property ID, booking ID, guest name, check-in/check-out dates
- Claim filed date (verifiable against the 14-day window)
- Total damages claimed, broken down per item
Before evidence section:
- Dated check-in inspection photos, room by room
- Timestamps visible and EXIF-intact
- Condition notes for each major asset (pre-existing marks, current state)
After evidence section:
- Check-out photos taken within hours of guest departure
- Same-angle shots as before-photos where possible
- Video walkthrough if damages are distributed
Damage itemization:
- Per-item breakdown: what, where, how damaged, photos, cost
- Repair estimates or replacement receipts attached per item
- Asset age and depreciation if relevant
Chain of evidence:
- Timeline of host actions (when damage was discovered, when guest was contacted, when claim was filed)
- Communication log with the guest
- SHA256 hashes for every photograph (optional but powerful)
Cost substantiation:
- Professional estimates with vendor contact info
- Original purchase receipts where available
- Depreciation calculation for items older than 2 years
Why most hosts can’t produce this packet
Reading the list, most experienced hosts will nod along. The structure is not surprising. What is surprising is how few hosts can actually assemble all of it on demand, under a 14-day deadline, while juggling back-to-back bookings.
The reason is almost always the same: the documentation is spread across too many tools.
- Check-in photos on Instagram or WhatsApp
- Damage photos in the phone camera roll
- Receipts in email
- Asset inventory in a spreadsheet (if it exists at all)
- Communication with the guest inside the Airbnb app
By the time a claim needs to go out, the host is manually hunting across four or five systems trying to reconstruct a narrative. Something always gets missed. The claim goes out with gaps. AirCover notices the gaps. The claim gets reduced.
The system that wins
What wins claims is not better photography or harder work. It is a single evidence vault where every piece of documentation — from the first check-in photo to the final cost receipt — lives in one place, timestamped, hashed, and ready to export.
That is the product we’re building. HostProof is the mobile app that sits between you and every Airbnb booking: guided check-in inspections, automatic deadline tracking, hash-verified originals, and one-click claim dossier export.
If you host on Airbnb and you’ve ever had a claim denied — or just want the next one to succeed — join the waitlist. Launch is spring 2026, and waitlist members lock in founder pricing for life.
Further reading
- How to document Airbnb damage before you file a claim — the tactical checklist
- What counts as wear-and-tear vs. damage in AirCover claims — the single biggest cause of reductions
- The 14-day AirCover filing deadline, explained — and how to stop missing it
Sources: Avada Properties 2024 Airbnb Damage Claim Analysis (20,000+ bookings); Airbnb Community Forum; BiggerPockets host threads; AirCover Terms of Service.