AITA for leaving a $700/Night Airbnb That Didn’t Live Up to the Hype?
A lucky couple hit the jackpot on a dream vacation, booking a $700-a-night Airbnb that was heavily advertised with five-star reviews and photos of a luxury ocean view. The arrival of the apartment shattered the dream: cramped rooms, outdated furniture, visibly dirty, and completely unlike the apartment. The husband demanded an explanation; the host brushed it off as “subjective.”
What complicated the story was that the host quickly left with a full refund and scathing reviews—leaving the host furious, thinking it “ruined their business.” The wife, though disappointed, still believed her husband had acted recklessly without giving them a chance. Now the internet is debating whether running away from a scam is justified or excessive.

‘AITA for leaving a $700/Night Airbnb That Didn’t Live Up to the Hype?’
A long-awaited splurge turned sour the moment they crossed the threshold.


The host’s dismissal sealed the decision to bail and warn others.


Backlash from the host and second-guessing from the wife followed.


Paying $700 per night creates a strong expectation that the apartment will match the listing price—anything less is fraudulent. The husband’s “photos plus refund” approach strictly adheres to Airbnb policy; the host’s “subjective” avoidance is a classic distraction. Reviews exist precisely to expose “bait and switch” tactics that often target special occasions.
The counterarguments to giving a “chance to fix” a collapse are under scrutiny: no cleaning crews renovate outdated decor or extend the space mid-stay. Complicating matters is the wife’s discomfort with confronting it, but facilitating fraud hurts future travelers. Airbnb reported a 40% year-over-year increase in fraud complaints in 2024, with fake photos at the top of the list.
“When listings significantly misrepresent a property, immediate removal and honest reviews are the only leverage customers have,” said consumer advocate Christopher Elliott, defending both his wallet and the integrity of the platform.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Every single commenter declares the husband NTA and applauds the escape.






A few roast the host’s contradictions and back the wife’s mild pushback with logic.
![[Reddit User] − NTA. They were trying to scam you, and you called them on it and got the f__k out of there. And for your wife . . ....](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762331503321-1.webp)
![[Reddit User] − The owner insisted that his Airbnb matched his listing and then whined that you didn’t give him a chance to fix it… ? ! What was there...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762331505127-2.webp)
Light sarcasm keeps the mood from turning too hostile.
![[Reddit User] − I don't understand why people use Airbnb at all.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762331513447-1.webp)


A dream vacation crashed into a filthy, misrepresented Airbnb, prompting an immediate exit, full refund, and honest review. The host cried sabotage; the wife wished for patience. Commenters unanimously crown the husband a hero for exposing fraud and saving future guests from the same trap. One bad stay doesn’t define a trip—dodging a scam does.
Have you ever walked away from a booking gone wrong? When does “giving them a chance” cross into wasting your own vacation?
