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Expedia, TripAdvisor change key rules after Aussie’s alleged Airbnb rape

A shocking alleged attack on an Australian tourist in a New York Airbnb has prompted accommodation rental companies to lay down strict new rules.

What happens after a sexual assault?

Airbnb’s competitors are tightening their rules for how guests access keys following a horrifying investigation into violent crimes at rental properties listed on the site.

Expedia’s rental business Vrbo, which operates globally, including in Australia, now forbids hosts from leaving keys in public places where the rental’s “owner, business manager or staff is not present,” according to the company’s site.

Hosts who do not abide by the rule may be banned from Vrbo.

TripAdvisor, meanwhile, also plans to tighten its rules on how keys are transferred to guests, Bloomberg reported.

An Airbnb logo on a billboard in Times Square in New York, where an Australian tourist was attacked in a holiday rental in 2016. Picture: Kena Betancur/AFP
An Airbnb logo on a billboard in Times Square in New York, where an Australian tourist was attacked in a holiday rental in 2016. Picture: Kena Betancur/AFP

The news comes two weeks after a shocking investigation revealed that a 29-year-old Australian tourist was allegedly raped at knifepoint in a Manhattan Airbnb rental in 2016 by an assailant who somehow had a key to the unit.

The unnamed female victim had reportedly picked up the keys to the rental at a nearby bodega without showing identification, raising questions of how many people were able to access the apartment.

The attack allegedly happened when she returned to the rental property alone after a New Year’s Eve party.

Airbnb paid the Australian woman $9 million two years after the 2016 alleged attack, a recent report has revealed. Picture: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP
Airbnb paid the Australian woman $9 million two years after the 2016 alleged attack, a recent report has revealed. Picture: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP

Two years after the incident, Airbnb paid the woman $9 million in a settlement that prevents her from suing or blaming the company or the rental’s host.

Airbnb spokesperson Ben Breit said the company requires all hosts to “properly secure their listings, and that includes requiring that key exchanges are made safely and securely” under a security policy that has been in place since 2019.

The company also requires hosts to change keypad and lockbox codes between reservations, Breit said.

Vrbo, meanwhile, only “recommends that hosts change codes, according to the company’s site.

TripAdvisor did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

Read related topics:AirBnB

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/health-safety/expedia-tripadvisor-change-key-rules-after-aussies-alleged-airbnb-rape/news-story/6d8f030a242c0d9afd53f2634bc7abbf