On April 20, 2026, Airbnb's updated Terms of Service took effect, and with them a substantially rewritten set of standards for how hosts can file damage claims through AirCover. The headline change is a formal ban on AI-generated, AI-enhanced, or upscaled images as evidence, but the broader update reaches further: a new definition of what counts as "Legitimate and Verifiable Evidence," tightened rules for smoke odor claims, an explicit list of consumables that no longer qualify for reimbursement, and a return to a more traditional arbitration framework for U.S. disputes. Every host with an account created before February 5, 2026 was required to re-accept the updated terms in order to keep receiving bookings, payouts, and access to host tools.
The changes are technical, but the practical implications matter. They alter how hosts should photograph and document a property after each stay, how cleaners and turnover teams record damage, and how disputes are resolved when something goes wrong. Below is a closer look at what the April 2026 update actually changes, why Airbnb made the changes, and what hosts can do to stay on the right side of the new rules.
The acceptance window and lockout mechanic
For most hosts, the most immediate change had nothing to do with damage at all. Airbnb required existing users to re-accept the updated terms once the prompt appeared on April 20. Hosts who delayed acceptance saw new bookings paused, payouts held, and host-side tools restricted until they completed the prompt. The mechanism is not new — Airbnb has used acceptance gates before — but the scale of this rollout was unusual, since the prompt did not appear in advance and many hosts only encountered it when they next opened the app.
For property managers running multi-account portfolios, the acceptance step had to be repeated per account. A short outage on a single calendar can cost real money during peak booking windows, which is part of why many property managers spent the week of April 20 verifying that every account in their stack had been updated.
A new standard: "Legitimate and Verifiable Evidence"
The substantive changes live in the updated Host Damage Protection Terms, where Airbnb introduced a defined term — "Legitimate and Verifiable Evidence" — and tied AirCover reimbursement to it. The definition explicitly excludes AI-generated, AI-enhanced, AI-upscaled, or otherwise synthetic content. Photos must be original. Receipts must be genuine. Repair estimates must come from real vendors and identifiable assessments.
This is a meaningful shift. AirCover's prior process relied on hosts uploading photo evidence and supporting documentation, with relatively little stated about how that material could be processed or modified. In recent years, consumer photo apps have made it easy to brighten, sharpen, fill in cropped areas, or generate images that look photographic but are not. Some hosts had begun running normal damage photos through AI cleanup tools simply to make them clearer. Under the April 2026 terms, even well-intentioned use of those tools can render an otherwise valid claim ineligible.
The change is also a response to several high-profile fraud cases. A Manhattan listing made news earlier in the year when a guest noticed that the same crack in a coffee table appeared in slightly different positions across multiple photos in a five-figure damage claim — a telltale sign of synthetic generation. Airbnb's update is, in part, an attempt to draw a clean line so that adjudicators do not have to decide case by case how much editing is too much.
Consumables, formally excluded
The update also defines "Consumables" for the first time and specifies that they are not eligible for damage reimbursement. The category is broad and intentionally so: toiletries, cleaning supplies, paper goods, kitchen staples, coffee, condiments, and similar items left for guest use are now explicitly outside the damage protection program.
In practice, most hosts were not filing AirCover claims for missing shampoo or coffee pods, but the previous terms left the question fuzzy. The new language closes that loop. Hosts who provide more substantial guest amenities — small appliances, premium kitchenware, branded gear — should make sure those items are inventoried and clearly distinct from consumable supplies if they want to preserve a path to reimbursement.
A higher bar for smoke odor claims
Smoke odor disputes are among the most contested in the AirCover process, and the April 2026 update rewrites the evidence standard. To qualify for reimbursement, hosts must now provide Legitimate and Verifiable Evidence that the responsible guest or one of their invitees caused the odor. Acceptable proof can include date-stamped photographs, professional assessments, smoke detector readings, or an admission by the guest. Vague "it smelled like smoke at turnover" claims, without supporting documentation, are unlikely to clear the new bar.
The update also clarifies which types of remediation will be considered for reimbursement. That matters because remediation costs vary widely. A textile-only treatment is not the same as ozone treatment of a full unit, and the new language nudges the process toward documented, professional remediation rather than informal estimates.
Arbitration changes and recommendation transparency
For U.S. users, the updated arbitration agreement returns the American Arbitration Association as the primary administrator and confirms that proceedings are confidential. The change is procedural, but worth noting for hosts who have been through a dispute under the previous framework.
Airbnb also added language describing how its recommendation systems work — part of a broader push across large platforms toward disclosing how ranking and personalization affect what users see. The disclosure does not change the algorithm, but it formalizes that Airbnb uses recommendation systems and that listings can be ranked and surfaced based on a wide range of signals.
What hosts should actually do
Most of the April 2026 changes do not require a new tool or workflow so much as a more disciplined version of one many hosts already have.
Originals first. Whatever camera or app a turnover team uses, the originals — unedited, with full metadata — should be saved and uploaded to AirCover. If a photo needs to be cropped or rotated for clarity, hold onto the source file as well. Avoid one-tap cleanup features that quietly run AI enhancement on the image.
Time-stamped, contextual photos. A wide shot that shows the room, followed by a close-up of the damage, with EXIF data intact, is far more credible than a tight crop with no context. Date-stamped photos taken at check-in and check-out create a defensible record of condition.
A clean inventory. With consumables formally excluded, hosts benefit from a written or digital inventory of non-consumable items — appliances, electronics, decor, linens — that can be referenced in a claim. The inventory does not need to be elaborate, only consistent.
Documented smoke remediation. For hosts who occasionally deal with smoke odor, having a relationship with a remediation vendor, a clear estimate format, and a habit of capturing smoke detector readings will make a measurable difference under the new evidence standard.
A wider signal about platform risk
Beyond the damage rules themselves, the April 2026 update is a useful reminder that the terms governing a host's business on a large platform can change on a fixed date, with limited notice, and with real operational consequences. Hosts who concentrate all of their distribution on one platform inherit those changes wholesale. Hosts who maintain a direct booking presence — even a modest one — retain a channel where the rules of engagement are theirs to set.
That is not an argument for leaving Airbnb. The platform remains the largest source of demand for most short-term rentals, and the new damage claim standards, on balance, are likely to improve trust on both sides. It is an argument for building the kind of operation where a single policy update does not interrupt cash flow, and where the documentation habits required by the new AirCover rules can serve a host across every channel they sell on.