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Handle a late check-out or unauthorised stay
A resident who stays past their check-out date without your approval is an overstay. Most are accidental and resolve within hours; a small number need formal escalation. Handle them in stages.
Stage 1: a friendly reminder (day before)
Most overstays are caused by a resident losing track of dates. Send a clear reminder the day before:
"Hi [name], just a reminder check-out is tomorrow at [time]. Want me to know your plans for the morning?"
A surprisingly high number of overstays vanish at this step.
Stage 2: morning of check-out
A short message the morning of:
"Good morning! [Time] check-out today. Let me know if you need anything for the move-out."
If they reply with a problem ("my flight got delayed"), this is the time to either:
- Approve a paid late check-out (1–4 hours past, a small fee or goodwill).
- Approve a paid extension via the platform if they need more nights.
- Agree on a firm new exit time.
Stage 3: past check-out time, no response
Wait 2 hours, then a firmer message:
"Hi [name], check-out was at [time]. The room is needed for the next resident. Can you confirm you're on your way out or message me?"
Stage 4: still no response or refusing to leave
This is a serious situation. Your actions:
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Document everything.
- Screenshot the messages.
- Photograph the room as it is (open door, hallway, signs of belongings still present).
- Note times of every interaction.
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Contact Coliving support immediately at the help centre. Provide the booking number, timeline, and documentation. We can:
- Confirm the check-out date and rules to the resident.
- Open an unauthorised-overstay dispute on your behalf.
- Coordinate with you on next steps.
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Do not change the locks or remove their belongings without legal advice. Most jurisdictions require formal eviction processes for residents past their booking, even on short stays. Local laws vary.
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If you have a serious safety concern, contact local authorities.
After the overstay resolves
Once the resident leaves:
- Contact support to claim from the deposit through the platform for the overstay nights, plus any disruption costs (cleaning delays, displaced next resident).
- Submit evidence: messages, photos, the next-resident impact, receipts.
- See If a resident disputes a charge with their bank.
What you can charge for
- Per-day overstay rate — usually higher than the booking's per-day rate.
- Disruption to a next resident — relocation costs, refunds, lost bookings.
- Damage caused during the overstay — handled like normal damage claims.
Coliving support reviews and approves charges based on evidence and local norms.
How to prevent overstays
- Day-before reminders. Friction-free; most accidents prevented here.
- Smart lock that auto-disables. Some hosts auto-revoke door codes at check-out time + 30 minutes.
- Clear check-out time in the listing AND in the welcome message. Repetition reduces confusion.
- A buffer before the next arrival. A 2–4 hour gap gives slack for late departures without cascading.
Frequently asked questions
Q: Can I just enter the room and remove the resident's things? A: No, unless you have explicit legal grounds. In most places, even short-stay residents have some squatter-prevention protections. Talk to support and, if needed, local legal advice.
Q: What if the resident is just running 2 hours late? A: Be flexible. A 2-hour late check-out is rarely worth a formal dispute. Contact support if you want a small fee added; they can arrange it case-by-case.
Q: Does an overstay affect my host metrics? A: No, the resident's behaviour doesn't affect your metrics, but how you handle it can. Calm, documented handling reflects well; aggressive responses don't.