As one of the busiest travel weekends of the year approaches, Airbnb says it is expanding anti-party measures nationwide to help prevent disruptive gatherings over the Fourth of July holiday.
The company announced it is deploying its anti-party technology for the fifth consecutive Independence Day weekend. The screening system identifies certain higher-risk attempts to book entire-home listings and redirects those guests to alternative accommodations, such as private rooms or hotels.
Airbnb said the technology is intended to reduce the risk of unauthorized parties, which are prohibited on the platform year-round.
"This is the fifth year in a row we've run these defenses for July 4, and last year they redirected more than 20,000 people from higher-risk bookings over the holiday weekend," Rog Kaiser, Airbnb's vice president of fraud and safety operations, said in a statement. "That kind of capability – improved year over year – is what it takes to help make the holiday great for our hosts, guests and the communities around them."
In New Jersey, approximately 500 people were deterred from booking an entire home listing over the July 4 weekend last year, Airbnb says.
According to the company, more than 20,000 people were redirected from booking entire-home listings during the 2025 Fourth of July weekend, including about 3,100 in Florida, 3,100 in Texas and roughly 2,500 in California.
The company said the holiday measures complement its year-round reservation screening technology, which uses machine learning to help identify higher-risk bookings.
Airbnb said fewer than 0.06% of U.S. stays in 2025 resulted in a reported party.
According to the NJ Division of Travel & Tourism, lodging generated $14 billion in spending throughout 2025, about a 4% jump from 2024. The state welcomed over 124 million visitors in total last year.