Skip to main content

Airbnb boss reveals where he’ll go first when we can travel again

No surprises, it’s been a rough 12 months for Airbnb.

As the COVID-19 pandemic took hold last year, the vacation rental company and its millions of hosts saw bookings plummet globally, leaving it with little choice but to try to ride out the storm.

Recommended Videos

With vaccination programs now rolling out across the world, Airbnb and the wider travel industry is hoping 2021 will mark the start of a meaningful recovery as folks who’ve been cooped up at home begin booking trips again.

Airbnb boss Brian Chesky, for one, can’t wait to get out. In an interview with Bloomberg this week, he said that last year he spent “16 hours a day in sweatpants in front of an iMac, seven days a week.”

But he added that he’s “very much looking forward to traveling” after such a long time being stuck indoors.

So, where will he head to first?

“I will probably go to a national park,” Chesky told Bloomberg.

“I think I’ll just give a plug for national parks. There are, I think, 400 national parks in the United States. The average American lives within a tank of gas of a national park [and] most have never visited one.”

He added that he believes one of the biggest trends in travel as folks start to move again will be “people rediscovering the outdoors and national parks.”

The Airbnb chief said he was open to suggestions as to which park he should visit first.

Chesky was speaking as the company released its first financial results since its initial public offering in December 2020.

The figures showed Airbnb suffered a $3.89 billion net loss in the final quarter of last year, the result of not only the pandemic but also of one-time costs incurred by its transformation into a public company.

Nights and experiences booked via Airbnb dropped by 39% compared to the same three-month period a year earlier, totaling 46.3 million bookings for the quarter. Revenue came in at $859 million, marking a 22% fall on the same quarter a year ago.

In May 2020, Airbnb laid off 1,900 people, equal to about 25% of its workforce, with Chesky telling staff at the time: “We are collectively living through the most harrowing crisis of our lifetime, and as it began to unfold, global travel came to a standstill.”

The San Francisco-based company said this week it’s optimistic about the chances of a recovery, but added that the speed of it largely depends on the progression of the vaccination rollout.

Can’t wait to travel again? For inspiration, check out the best travel shows and documentaries on Netflix right now.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Hackers are pretending to be cybersecurity firm to lock your entire PC
A hacker typing on an Apple MacBook laptop while holding a phone. Both devices show code on their screens.

As hackers come up with new ways to attack, not even trustworthy names can be taken at face value. This time, a ransom-as-a-service (RaaS) attack is being used to impersonate a cybersecurity vendor called Sophos.

The RaaS, referred to as SophosEncrypt, can take hold of your files -- or even your whole PC -- and requires payment to have them decrypted.

Read more
‘World’s largest sundial’ to double as green energy provider
Houston's Arco del Tiempo (Arch of Time).

Houston’s next piece of public art is being described as "the world's largest sundial" and will also produce solar power for the local community.

The striking Arco del Tiempo (Arch of Time) is the creation of Berlin-based artist and architect Riccardo Mariano and will be installed in the Texan city’s East End district in 2024.

Read more
Nvidia’s peace offering isn’t working
Two MSI RTX 4060 Ti 16GB GPUs over a black background.

Nvidia's RTX 4060 Ti 16GB is here, but you wouldn't know it if you didn't follow GPU news closely. It seems that the GPU might just be so far behind some of the best graphics cards that Nvidia isn't advertising it too much. As a result, early benchmarks are scarce.

MSI has released some benchmarks of its own, comparing the 8GB and the 16GB versions of the RTX 4060 Ti. It turns out that the new GPU might actually be slower. Is this why Nvidia didn't even make its own version of this card?

Read more