
Kevin Musprett
Co-founder & CEO
Jan 9, 2026 – 5 MIN


If you host long enough, you learn something simple: guests do not judge you only on the stay. They judge you on how you communicate.
Fast, clear replies reduce confusion, prevent small issues from becoming big ones, and set the tone for the whole trip.
This guide gives you a messaging system you can use immediately:
How to reduce your inbox load with automation, including AI for short term rentals for when you are ready to improve your guest experiences
Most hosts try to answer the question.
Great hosts do three things in one reply:
That is how you cut back and forth and protect reviews.
When you reply, follow this structure:
1) Confirm
Repeat the request in one line so the guest feels heard.
2) Answer
Give the direct answer first.
3) Next step
Tell them exactly what to do next.
4) Reassure
One calm line that reduces anxiety.
This works because it is fast to write, easy to read, and it avoids sounding like a script.
Response speed
You do not need to respond instantly all day, but you do need a consistent standard.
A simple rule:
If you manage a team, define this in writing so guests get the same experience regardless of who is on shift.
Message length
Short wins. Most guests are reading on their phone while walking, driving, or stressed at a door.
Aim for:
Tone
Pick one tone and keep it consistent.
What matters most is consistency across replies.
These follow the 4 part framework. Replace placeholders with your details.
1) Check-in time
Hi {{guest_first_name}}. Check-in is after {{checkin_time}}.
If you share your arrival time, I will confirm the best entry instructions for you. If anything changes on the day, message me here.
2) Directions
Got it. Here are the best directions:
If you tell me whether you are driving or taking a taxi, I will share the easiest drop off point.
3) Wifi
Sure. Wifi is:
If it does not connect, tell me what device you are using and I will troubleshoot quickly.
4) Early check in request
Got it. Early check-in may be possible depending on cleaning.
What time are you arriving? I will confirm as soon as the unit is ready.
5) Late checkout request
Thanks for asking. Late checkout depends on the cleaning schedule and the next booking.
What time would you like? I will confirm what is possible.
6) Lock or keypad issue at arrival
No problem, we will get you in.
Please confirm:
If it still does not open, send a photo of the keypad and the door and I will guide you.
7) Complaint: noise
Thanks for letting me know. I am sorry you are dealing with that.
Can you share:
I will address it and keep you updated here.
8) Maintenance issue, non urgent
Thanks for the message. Please send a photo and a short description of what is not working.
I will arrange help and update you with timing.
Before you hit send, scan your reply and see if it answers these common follow-ups:
One extra line here prevents multiple messages later.
These are high volume, low risk:
This is where airbnb automated messages examples help. If you want a full template library by stage.
These are higher risk:
Automation should acknowledge and collect details, then escalate.
Templates and scheduled messages reduce typing. They do not eliminate the inbox because guests ask real questions that require context for airbnb automation.
Common examples:
This is the point where operators move from “templates” to “autopilot replies with guardrails.”
Boring Host is built to automate guest replies using AI on autopilot, while staying safe:
Including some resources if you want to see how airbnb automation works or reduce repeated questions at the source you can pair it with a strong airbnb digital check in guide.
Short. Aim for 3 to 6 lines, use bullets for steps, and end with one clear next action.
Anything that blocks entry or comfort, like access issues, directions, heating, water, safety, or noise.
Yes. Templates are ideal for facts and instructions like wifi, parking, and check-in steps. Avoid templating sensitive judgment calls.
Use a repeatable reply framework, build templates for high volume questions, and automate what is safe. If volume is high, consider AI autopilot with confidence gating and escalation.
Refunds, disputes, damage, safety issues, and policy exceptions should have human review.
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Kevin Musprett
Co-founder & CEO
Jan 9, 2026 – 5 MIN

