Airbnb boasts a “trusted community,” where laid-back hosts looking to make some spare cash off of their apartments connect with world travelers — but a scathing new report paints a very different, illicit picture.
New York state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman issued a report Thursday finding that as many as 72% of the Airbnb reservations in New York City over the last several years violated New York law. The report, titled “Airbnb In The City,” also found commercial enterprises using Airbnb to operate multimillion-dollar businesses. One commercial user earned $6.8 million in less than five years.
“This report raises serious concerns about the proliferation of illegal hotels and the impact of Airbnb and sites like it on the City of New York,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “We must ensure that, as online marketplaces revolutionize the way we live, laws designed to promote safety and quality-of-life are not forsaken under the pretext of innovation.”
Schneiderman also announced the formation of a joint enforcement initiative with the City of New York to investigate and shut down illegal hotels in New York City. The Attorney General’s Internet and Taxpayer Protection Bureaus and the City’s Departments of Finance and Buildings, along with the Office of Special Enforcement, will work together to investigate violations of building and safety codes, tax regulations and the executive law. Said Schneiderman, “The joint city and state enforcement initiative is aimed at aggressively tackling this growing problem, protecting the safety of tourists and safeguarding the quality-of-life of neighborhood residents.”









