Can You See Your Own Reviews On Airbnb? | Clear Steps Guide

Yes, on Airbnb your profile shows both reviews you’ve received and the feedback you’ve left—here’s how to find and manage them.

If you use Airbnb, feedback shapes bookings and trust. Guests want to confirm their reputation. Hosts want a quick way to audit comments, ratings, and replies. The good news: you can view everything tied to your profile—both the notes others wrote about you and the opinions you posted about stays or guests. This guide gives the exact taps and clicks, plus simple fixes when something doesn’t appear where you expect.

Ways To View Your Airbnb Reviews (Guest And Host)

You can reach your reviews from two places: your public profile and the Reviews area inside your account. Both routes show two buckets—comments about you and comments by you. The steps differ a bit on desktop and in the app, so use the quick map below and then pick the detailed path that matches your device.

Quick Map Of Where Everything Lives

Action Desktop Path App Path
See comments about you Profile → Reviews → From guests / From hosts Profile tab → Reviews → About you
See comments you wrote Profile → Reviews → By you Profile tab → Reviews → By you
Open your public profile Menu → Go to profile Profile photo → View profile

Desktop: Two Clicks To Your Review Lists

Log in on a browser. Click your photo, then choose Profile. Hit Reviews. Use the tabs to switch between feedback about you and feedback you wrote. If you host, you’ll also see listing-level comments. If you travel, you’ll see a history of stays you rated and what hosts said about you.

Mobile App: The Same Buckets, New Labels

Open the Airbnb app. Tap your photo to enter your profile. Tap Reviews. Use the toggles to move between About you and By you. On smaller screens, the app collapses older items; tap any card to expand the full text and star details.

What You’ll See On Profiles And Listing Pages

Reviews appear in two main places: your profile and any listings you manage. Your profile carries a running list of feedback you received as a guest, plus a tab with comments you posted. If a reservation had several confirmed travelers, a host’s note about the group can appear on each traveler’s profile. On the host side, your listing page shows stay-specific remarks and photos attached to that place. Ratings roll up into the overall star score that shows next to your name or listing title.

About You vs. By You

About you is what others wrote. That includes star ratings and any text comments. By you is what you wrote. You can open each item to view the full text, the date, and the trip or guest it relates to. Hosts also see sub-ratings like cleanliness and accuracy on the listing side.

Double-Blind Timing: Why A Fresh Review Might Not Be Visible Yet

Airbnb uses a double-blind window. Both sides submit feedback within a set period after checkout. Neither side can read the other’s note until both have posted or the window closes. If you can’t see a brand-new comment yet, you’re likely still inside that window. Once both submissions are in—or the timer ends—both go live together.

Step-By-Step: Find Feedback You Wrote

Sometimes you want to reread what you wrote, copy a phrase, or check whether a note saved. Here’s the shortest route on each platform.

On Desktop

  1. Click your photo → Profile.
  2. Open Reviews.
  3. Choose By you to see every stay or guest you rated.

On The App

  1. Tap your photo → View profile.
  2. Tap Reviews → pick By you.

Need the official wording for the desktop route or app labels? See Airbnb’s help page on find your reviews. It shows the exact menu names and tabs for both roles and both platforms.

Step-By-Step: Find Feedback Others Wrote About You

Guests see notes from hosts. Hosts see notes from guests. Both appear in predictable spots.

On Desktop

  1. Click your photo → ProfileReviews.
  2. Pick From hosts (guest view) or From guests (host view).

On The App

  1. Tap your photo → View profile.
  2. Open Reviews → select About you.

You can also reach the same list by visiting your public profile and scrolling to the review section. Reviews include a link back to each writer’s profile, so readers can click through and learn more about them too.

Editing, Removing, And Replying: What’s Possible

Airbnb allows a narrow edit window for home-stay notes you wrote, and it gives a path to request removal in limited cases. Replies are always available, and a steady, calm reply helps readers see context.

Edit A Note You Wrote (Before It Publishes)

You can tweak a home-stay comment you posted—until it publishes. After both sides submit or the window ends, edits lock. The help article on editing a review shows the exact path: Profile → Reviews → By you, then open the item and submit changes. This edit path doesn’t apply to every review type; some categories don’t allow edits at all once submitted.

Request Removal In Limited Cases

You can’t delete a comment you wrote or one you received on your own. Airbnb may remove content that breaks its rules—things like irrelevant text, private data, or proven fraud. The review policy page explains what qualifies and who can ask for removal. You’ll find the request link in the help center inside the reviews topic.

Reply To Feedback

Replies live under the original comment. Keep it short, factual, and polite. Address any fix or improvement you made since the stay. Readers scan replies to judge tone and responsiveness.

Troubleshooting: “I Can’t Find My Comments”

Here are common reasons a review feels missing and the fix that usually solves it.

You’re Still Inside The Window

If checkout was recent, both sides might still be in the submission period. Post your note and wait for the window to end. Both items publish together.

You’re In The Wrong Tab

On both desktop and app, the lists split into About you and By you. Switch tabs. Many users stay on the first tab and never see the other bucket.

The Comment Is On A Listing, Not Your Profile

Hosts: open the listing page and scroll to reviews. Some viewers will read you there first, not on your profile.

Multiple Travelers On One Booking

Group trips can place the same host note on several traveler profiles. If you joined a trip as an extra guest, check your profile; the group note can appear there.

Wrong Account

If you use separate logins as a traveler and as a host, open the account that made the booking or manages the listing. Review content attaches to the account connected to that reservation.

Make The Most Of Your Review History

Feedback isn’t just a score. It’s content future guests and hosts read while deciding. Use it to build trust and reduce back-and-forth messages. Here are quick wins you can apply today.

For Guests

  • Keep comments specific. Mention what matched the listing and what stood out during the stay.
  • Avoid personal details. Stick to the stay. No private info and no guesswork about motives.
  • Leave a fair star mix. Use the sub-ratings honestly. Hosts rely on those to spot fixes.

For Hosts

  • Reply with solutions. A short note about a fix beats a long defense.
  • Pull phrases for your listing. Use short quotes in your description (only if the platform allows) to mirror what guests already praise.
  • Track patterns. If the same point shows up three times, plan a change and say so in your reply.

Privacy And Visibility Basics

Your profile is public. Review snippets can appear in search cards, message threads tied to bookings, and on the listing page. The name, years on the platform, trips count, and identity-verified date may appear near review blocks. Anyone opening a review can click through to the writer’s profile.

What You Can And Can’t Do With Reviews

Here’s a quick checker you can scan before you open a ticket or try to change a comment. This table sits at the point where most readers ask, “Can I edit this?” or “Why can’t I see that yet?”

Action Allowed? Notes
Edit a home-stay note you wrote Yes (before publish) Use Profile → Reviews → By you, then open the item and submit changes.
Edit after publish No Double-blind window ends; both items post; edits lock.
Delete a comment about you No Request removal only if it breaks the policy.
Reply to a comment Yes Short, calm, factual replies help readers.
See a fresh note during the window No Both sides submit; both publish together when time runs out.

Clear Paths For Each Role

Hosts often juggle several screens. Guests usually just need one. Match your route to your role and you’ll land on the right list faster.

Hosts

  1. Open MenuProfile.
  2. Click Reviews.
  3. Use From guests to audit recent stays; use By you to check notes you posted.
  4. Visit each listing page to see stay-specific comments in place.

Guests

  1. Open your profile.
  2. Tap or click Reviews.
  3. Pick About you for host feedback; pick By you for your notes on past stays.

Pro Tips To Keep Ratings Healthy

  • Be timely. Post within the window. Fresh detail helps future readers.
  • Stick to facts. Dates, times, and clear observations age well and hold up during checks.
  • Use replies to show fixes. A short note about what changed after a stay tells a better story than a long back-and-forth.
  • Keep screenshots of key threads. If you ever need to flag a problem, clear documentation speeds the review process.

When To Ask Airbnb For Help

Most review questions resolve by switching tabs, waiting for the window to end, or opening your listing page. Reach out only when a comment looks off-topic, shares private data, or breaks platform rules. The reviews policy page lays out the line. If you need to request removal, attach clear evidence in your case notes and stay concise.

Bottom Line For Visibility

You can check every review tied to your account—both the notes you received and the feedback you posted. Use the steps near the top to jump straight to the right list on desktop or in the app. If a fresh stay isn’t visible yet, you’re likely still inside the blind window. Once the timer ends, everything appears at the same time. From there, you can reply, tidy up small typos before publish on eligible items, and point future readers to the parts that show how you host or travel.