The Purple Kitchen Is a Shocker , But It Is Not the Problem

The Purple Kitchen Is a Shocker , But It Is Not the Problem

Hosts obsess over cosmetics while the real booking-killers hide in plain sight. Here’s what the data actually says about why guests leave bad reviews.

Picture it: you walk into an Airbnb, and the kitchen is painted a deep, bold, undeniably shocking shade of purple. Your eyes go wide. You pull out your phone to text your travel companion. It is, objectively, a lot.

And yet, by the end of the trip, you leave a five-star review. Not despite the purple kitchen. Because everything else worked perfectly.

This is the uncomfortable truth that new 👀short-term rental hosts spend months avoiding: the cosmetic stuff, the stuff you can see in listing photos, is rarely what kills your ratings. It’s the invisible stuff. The experience stuff. The things guests only discover after they’ve already handed you their credit card.

“A striking kitchen gets a laugh and a photo. A broken shower, a missing coffee filter, or an unresponsive host gets a one-star review.”

Why Hosts Fixate on the Wrong Things

It’s completely understandable. When you’re preparing a property to list, you see it through the lens of a camera. You’re staging, photographing, and optimising for the click, the moment a potential guest scrolls past and stops. So naturally, bold colours, mismatched tiles, or dated cabinetry feel like urgent problems to solve.

But here’s the shift: guests book based on photos. They review based on experience. These are two entirely different decision points, governed by two entirely different emotional frameworks.

The purple kitchen 📞might cost you a handful of bookings from guests who simply don’t vibe with the aesthetic. That’s a manageable, predictable loss, and honestly, guests who self-select based on a quirky décor often turn out to be your most forgiving, enthusiastic reviewers. They came in expecting personality and got personality. Expectations met.

What Actually Tanks Your Reviews: The Real Culprits

Study after study of 🎙️Airbnb reviews and host forums reveals a consistent pattern. The complaints that lead to three stars or below rarely center on paint colours. They center on:

01 Cleanliness that doesn’t match the photos

This is the single most-cited reason for negative reviews across every short-term rental platform. One hair on a pillow, one sticky countertop, one bathroom that looks like it was “cleaned” in under four minutes, and your rating is gone.

02 Slow or unhelpful host communication

Guests accept imperfect properties. They do not accept being ignored. If something goes wrong, and something always goes wrong eventually,  a host who responds in under an hour with a real solution earns the five stars even in a difficult situation.

03 The listing description not matching reality

“Cozy” that turns out to mean “cramped.” “5 minutes from downtown” that turns out to mean “5 minutes by highway at 2am.” Guests feel deceived, and deception produces visceral, public, negative reviews.

04 Missing or broken essentials

No toilet paper on arrival. A showerhead that dribbles. A kitchen that’s described as “fully equipped” but lacks a can opener or a second set of plates. These are small things that loom enormous when you’re 300 miles from home.

05 Check-in problems

A confusing lockbox code, a key that sticks, an address that leads to the wrong building, the first 15 minutes set the emotional tone for the entire stay. A rocky arrival is almost impossible to recover from, no matter how charming the rest of the property.

The Purple Kitchen Principle

Here’s what experienced hosts come to understand, usually after a few hundred reviews: character and quirk are almost always forgiven. Dysfunction is rarely forgiven.

A bold paint choice is a personality. Guests can appreciate personality, even if it’s not their personal taste. What they cannot appreciate, and will not overlook, is a property that doesn’t deliver on its basic promise of being a clean, functional, comfortable place to sleep.

The “purple kitchen principle” is simply this: stop spending energy on the visible and start investing in the experiential. The things that show up in photos are what guests use to choose you. The things they experience in person are what guests use to rate you. Your optimisation efforts need to match that reality.

Key Takeaway for Hosts

Before you repaint a single wall, audit your guest experience end to end. Walk through your own check-in process. Read your last three reviews for patterns. Ask yourself: Is my cleaning thorough enough to be photographed? Do I respond to messages within the hour? Does every essential item have a backup? Fix those first. The kitchen colour is a conversation starter; it is not a booking problem.

What to Actually Improve (and When)

None of this means aesthetics don’t matter at all. A listing that looks tired and unloved in photos will struggle to convert browsers into bookers in the first place. But there’s a hierarchy worth internalising:

1st Priority: Operational excellence. Cleanliness, communication, accuracy, functional essentials, seamless check-in.

2nd priority: Photograph-worthy presentation. Good lighting, tidy staging, and clear photos that represent the space honestly.

3rd priority: Aesthetic upgrades. New paint, updated fixtures, décor that photographs well, and feels cohesive in person.

Most hosts who are struggling with reviews are operating this list in reverse. They’re budgeting for throw pillows while their cleaning protocol has gaps. They’re agonising over tile while their message response time sits at six hours.

Fix the foundation first. The purple kitchen can stay exactly as it is.

A Practical Audit Checklist for Your Listing

Before your next guest arrives, walk through this:

✔ Is every room genuinely clean, floors, behind doors, inside appliances, in bathroom corners?

✔ Does your listing description match the current state of your property, exactly?

✔ Is check-in information clear enough that a first-time visitor with no prior context could get in without a single question?

✔ Are all essentials stocked, toilet paper, dish soap, coffee supplies, basic condiments if you offer a kitchen?

✔ Is your phone on, and are you prepared to respond within the hour for the duration of their stay?

✔ Is every appliance and fixture actually working, not “kind of working” or “usually working”?

If you can check every box there, your rating will reflect it, regardless of what color your kitchen happens to be.

Listen to 🎙️ She Renovates Podcasts related to Airbnb

Written by Bernadette Janson, founder of The School of Renovating and host of the She Renovates Podcast.

 

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Bernadette Janson

"My own passion for renovating has helped me build a marriage, a family, friendships and a successful business. I created The School of Renovating to share the power of this career."

Bernadette has over 30 years of experience in the renovating for profit business. She’s a registered nurse, a renovator, a mum, and a teacher.

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