Yes, your Airbnb reviews are visible on your profile and inside the Reviews tab across web and app.
If you’re wondering where feedback lives, the short answer is: in two places—your public profile and a dedicated Reviews area tied to your account. Guests and hosts can check comments and star ratings, see what they wrote, and track pending invites while the review window is still open. This guide shows the exact taps and clicks, what’s public, and what you can change.
Fast Paths: Where Your Feedback Lives
Both web and mobile have clear routes. The labels differ slightly, but the destinations match. Use the table below to jump straight to the page you need.
| Location | Path | What You’ll See |
|---|---|---|
| Guest (Desktop) | Profile > Reviews > Reviews about you | All host-written comments and any star ratings tied to your stays |
| Guest (Mobile App) | Profile tab > Reviews | Same as desktop, plus pending invites if the window is open |
| Host (Desktop) | Profile > Reviews > Reviews about you / By you | Guest feedback on your listing and your own guest reviews |
| Host (Mobile App) | Menu > Profile > Reviews | Guest comments, category stars, and your written reviews |
| Public Profile (Guest or Host) | Open your profile URL | Reviews you received and those you wrote that appear publicly |
| Trips / Reservations | Trips > Past trip > Leave a review / View review | Pending invites during the window; posted feedback afterward |
How Reviews Work On Airbnb
Airbnb uses a double-blind window. Guests and hosts can post for 14 days after checkout. Neither side sees the other’s text until both submit or the window ends. When the window closes, any submitted review posts. If only one side wrote a review, that single review goes live after the deadline. Star ratings travel with the text where applicable, and they factor into listing scores and guest profiles.
What’s Public And What Isn’t
Your public profile shows the feedback others gave you, plus comments you wrote that Airbnb chooses to display. Hosts can also respond publicly under a guest’s review on the listing page. Private notes—like the “private feedback” field—stay between you and the other party and don’t show up on your public page.
Guest View Versus Host View
Guests mainly see host comments and any overall stars. Hosts get more detail on their listing: category star averages (cleanliness, accuracy, check-in, and so on) plus written remarks. Both roles can filter by stays and scan timelines to see how feedback has shifted over time.
See Your Airbnb Reviews On Desktop And Phone
Here are the exact steps on web and mobile. The wording may vary a touch across regions, but the flow stays simple.
Guest Steps (Desktop)
- Sign in on a browser.
- Click Profile in the top-right menu.
- Choose Reviews, then open Reviews about you to read host feedback.
- Switch to By you to see comments you wrote for hosts.
Guest Steps (Mobile App)
- Open the app and tap your Profile icon.
- Tap Reviews.
- Toggle between feedback about you and reviews you posted.
Host Steps (Desktop)
- Sign in and click your avatar.
- Choose Profile > Reviews.
- Open Reviews about you for guest comments on your listing.
- Open By you for feedback you left for guests.
Host Steps (Mobile App)
- Open the app and tap the menu or avatar.
- Go to Profile > Reviews.
- Check both tabs for incoming and outgoing feedback.
Review Timing, Posting, And Editing
The 14-day window matters. You can add your review during that period. Once both parties post—or the window closes—reviews go live. After publication, text can’t be changed by the author, but hosts can add a public response beneath a posted review. If you posted first and the other side hasn’t submitted yet, you can revise your text within the window. Once the other side posts or the window ends, edits close.
What If You Miss The Window?
If you miss it, you can’t add a new review for that stay. Future trips will give you a fresh invite. For cancelled stays on or after the scheduled check-in date, the platform may still allow comments tied to that reservation type.
Can You Change Or Remove A Review?
You can tweak your own text only before both sides publish and while the window is open. After that, you can’t edit. Removal is rare and handled by policy: if a review breaks content rules (hate speech, doxxing, threats, extortion, irrelevant promo, and so on), you can report it for moderation. Hosts can also post a calm, factual public reply to give context instead of chasing removal.
Privacy And Visibility Basics
Your profile is public to logged-in users and linked from listings you book or host. People can click through from a listing page to your profile and read the thread of feedback attached to your account. If you prefer less exposure, keep the bio minimal and stick to neutral profile photos. Reviews tied to listings remain on the listing page too, grouped by stay.
Quality Tips: Writing Feedback That Helps
Clear reviews help everyone. Keep them short and specific. Mention what matched the listing and what fell short. For hosts, call out guest communication and house-rules fit. For guests, note cleanliness, accuracy, noise, check-in, and any maintenance issues. Avoid personal details and stick to the stay.
Guest Checklist When Posting
- State the basics: dates, purpose of trip (one word is enough), who traveled.
- Confirm what was accurate: location, photos, amenities.
- Flag fixes plainly: bedding, Wi-Fi speed, temperature control, street noise.
- Add a kind note if the host handled a hiccup fast.
Host Checklist When Posting
- Be fair and brief. Stick to stay facts.
- Note communication, checkout timing, and care for the place.
- Avoid guesses about motives or sensitive traits.
- Use the private field for coaching points that don’t belong on the public page.
Time Windows, Actions, And Where To Click
Keep this handy for common scenarios—posting, editing, replying, and reporting.
| Action | Time Limit | Where To Do It |
|---|---|---|
| Write a review (guest or host) | Up to 14 days after checkout | Trips > Past trip > Leave a review |
| Edit your text (you posted first) | During the 14-day window, until the other side posts | Profile > Reviews > By you > Edit |
| Publicly respond to a review about you | No fixed window once the review is live | Profile > Reviews > Reviews about you > Respond |
| Report a review for policy issues | Any time after it’s posted | Open the review > Report |
| See category star averages (hosts) | Any time | Profile > Reviews > Host view |
Practical Scenarios And Fixes
You Posted And Spotted A Typo
If the other side hasn’t posted yet and the window is still open, go back to your By you tab and edit. Once both sides post or the deadline passes, the text locks.
You See A Review That Breaks Rules
Open the review, tap or click the three dots, and report it. Point to the exact line that breaks policy. Keep your public reply short and factual while the platform reviews the report.
You Can’t Find Your Feedback
Make sure you’re signed in to the correct account and check both the web and the app. If your name changed or you merged accounts in the past, the profile URL might differ from older bookmarks. Use the in-app profile menu to jump straight to Reviews.
What Hosts See Beyond Text
Host dashboards include category stars that roll into the overall score guests see on listing cards. Cleaner, more accurate listings with smooth check-in flow tend to earn steadier scores. If your averages dip, scan recent comments for recurring notes and fix the top one or two items first.
Helpful Official Pages
You can confirm timing in Airbnb’s own articles and learn the review flow end-to-end. For the time window and publishing rules, read the How reviews work page. To jump straight to your feedback from inside your account, follow the steps in Find your reviews. Hosts who want a deeper dive on category stars can scan Ratings for homes.
Method Notes
This guide uses public help pages from Airbnb, current at the time of writing. Screens and menu labels can change with app updates. If a label has moved, the Profile > Reviews route still anchors the same data.
