
Un séjour stressant à Saratoga.
Little Paradise offre une expérience d'hébergement à la fois unique et controversée à Saratoga, en Californie. Elle s'adresse aux clients recherchant une atmosphère à domicile pendant leur séjour. Cependant, les visiteurs potentiels devraient prendre connaissance des règles strictes et des questions relatives à la légalité de l'opération, soulevées par des clients précédents. Bien que l'objectif soit de proposer un espace accueillant, les expériences peuvent varier considérablement, notamment en ce qui concerne les politiques d'accueil des visiteurs et la communication avec l'hôte. Les clients pourraient trouver l'environnement épanouissant ou frustrant, en fonction de leurs attentes en matière d'hospitalité et des interactions avec le quartier.
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Chambres d'invités entièrement meublées avec coin cuisine et salles de bains privatives en location mensuelle ou à long terme.
Séjours nocturnes confortables avec les équipements essentiels, parfaits pour les voyageurs visitant Saratoga.
Conseils sur les attractions, les restaurants et les activités à proximité pour améliorer votre séjour dans la région.
Nettoyage et entretien réguliers pour assurer un environnement propre et agréable pour les invités.
Internet haut débit inclus et services publics de base pour une expérience fluide et connectée.
Booked this spot for $6,500 a month, expecting a nice place, but got a rogue operation — this Airbnb is illegal and it is banned by city law. This however does not prevent the host from acting like you are criminal for having a guest over for tea. Rules are her gospel—except, the ones that the city makes. Neighbors asked me if I was an Airbnb guest and were NOT happy to find out that I was, understandably. This made for a rather uncomfortable situation in the neighborhood. Fresh off surgery, I was a hobbling mess, but the host decided I was secretly Usain Bolt, ready to sprint to Applebee’s for dinner with friends rather than—horror of horrors—have a friend step inside to deliver medication and help take care of me. That’ll be $50 per visitor, please! The host has a “no visitor” policy which I initially understood to mean no unregistered overnight guests. I quickly learned this meant no one at any time can be in the house, which I now also understand is part of her attempts to evade the city of Saratoga laws, and her neighbors, by running a secretive operation. Then there was the guest debacle. My dad and I stayed there for the first two weeks, and when he left, I asked to substitute in a second guest— using the spot I’d already paid out for. The host insisted I pay extra for a ‘third’ guest, despite the obvious facts of the case: two people, max, at all times, fully prepaid. She continued to insist I pay for three guests that never existed. She eventually resorted to threatening me with eviction if I did not pay for a third guest that was not there—because nothing says ‘hospitality’ like tossing a recovering tenant over a phantom headcount. My poor elderly dad aged a decade dodging her nonsense and left early. What ultimately inspired me to write such a review, was the host’s intransigent and arrogant commitment to “rule following”, all the while violating actual laws in California. For that princely sum, I also got to play musical chairs with the house and leave for hours at a time so she could do laundry—$6,500 doesn’t buy privacy, apparently, just a front-row seat to her spin cycle. The moldy washing machine? A biohazard masterpiece. The broken garbage disposal? Avant-garde decor I didn’t ask for. I paid for a palace and got a sitcom plot where the villain’s a stingy ego-maniac on a power trip with a side hustle in hypocrisy. Book this if you love stress, absurdity, and a whiff of illegal Airbnb activity. I’d rather recover in peace under a bridge.
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