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0143ab93_videojs8_1563605_YT_2d24ba15 licensed under gpl3-or-later
Views : 5,965,423
Genre: Travel & Events
License: Standard YouTube License
Uploaded At Nov 19, 2024 ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
Rating : 4.945 (7,020/502,643 LTDR)
98.62% of the users lieked the video!!
1.38% of the users dislieked the video!!
User score: 97.93- Overwhelmingly Positive
RYD date created : 2024-11-25T23:56:53.995328Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
In New Orleans, airbnbs are regulated with an iron fist. So many ppl want to stay in the French Quarter and nooope. It's illegal. You can only stay in certain districts in the city and there has to be a tenant on the property. The tenant may be stay in an annex or the attic but whole house rentals in the city of New Orleans (outside the city in nearby areas are different) is illegal. Many ppl visiting New Orleans think they get the whole house to party in only to find out the owner is staying in the downstairs bedroom or in the studio apartment in the backyard for the sake of keeping it legal. In some high traffic districts, if you do Airbnb for more than a certain amount of months out of the year, you have to pay hotel taxes which are super high so some Airbnb only exist during peak seasons. That is late October, New Years Eve, Mardi Gras and Spring Break. The reason for these rules was because Airbnb made rent prices go up to the point homelessness hit an all time high. By making it illegal in certain districts requiring a tenant live on the property, and peak season allowance to avoid taxes it brought down rent costs making it more affordable for locals. In my experience if there is an Airbnb in the "heart of the city" check zoning laws first. Many districts world
wide don't allow airbnb in certain areas anymore because it triggers inflation. I personally agree with these laws because I saw what unregulated did to the economy. Ppl were getting kicked out of their apartments because they could charge $100-400 (one place I know even charged $650 for the night because it was 4 bedrooms with a pool) a night instead of $850-2000 a month depending on the area. One place I know kicked out residents that stayed there for over a decade because they could rent it out daily and make $4000 a month for a 2 bedroom apt instead of the $1500 they were making before.
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When Airbnb launched it was cheap and often well located. The longer it’s gone on the more scams and creepy crap seems to come on the platform to the point I don’t even look anymore. Hotels are often very competitively priced even next to Airbnbs and you are way less likely to have a hidden camera in it.
5.2K |
protip: in almost EVERY case an Air-BnB IS illegal. They aren't licensed (hotels and motels have to be to rent short term) and they don't have a business license, so they can't legally charge you "sales" (and other, many jurisdictions have additional taxes on hotel stays, taxe4s) which now puts them in trouble with the IRS and the state revenue agency. Plus many many many cities have OUTLAWED Airbnb because of all the problems that arise.
"Is my AirBnB legal?" Do they prominently display a business license and charge you sales tax (and other taxes)? No? Then it's NOT legal.
50 |
Lived in Korea. A Korean friend told me of a law where each family can only have one house to live in plus one house to rent, and any additional house they rent would go under significant taxes. Yes, that law you want in your Western country and will never get. This is probably what the landlord was trying to avoid.
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@powcar91
6 days ago
I would be concern about hidden cameras as well.
66K |