Airbnb Just Added Car Service in 125 Cities. Your Guest's Entire Trip Now Lives in One App.
Airbnb's new pre-booked transfer service with Welcome Pickups isn't a ride-hailing play... it's an ecosystem play, and independent hotel operators should be paying attention to what happens when your competitor stops being an accommodation platform and starts owning the entire trip.
So here's what actually happened. On March 31, Airbnb launched a private car transfer service in partnership with a company called Welcome Pickups... a Greece-based outfit that handles scheduled airport-to-accommodation transfers. It's live in over 125 cities across Asia, Europe, and Latin America. Not the US yet. Not on-demand like Uber. Pre-booked, fixed-price, managed entirely within the Airbnb app. You book your stay, and immediately in the Trips tab, there's an option to book your ride. Pilot program earlier this year pulled a 4.96 out of 5 satisfaction rating across thousands of bookings.
Look, if you're reading this and thinking "so what, it's a car service"... you're looking at the feature and missing the architecture. This isn't about getting someone from the airport to a rental apartment. This is about Airbnb systematically eliminating every reason a traveler would ever leave their app during the booking journey. They launched "Airbnb Services" back in May 2025... private chefs, personal training, spa treatments. Now ground transportation. Brian Chesky has been saying for years that he wants to "own the entire trip." Most people heard that as CEO aspiration-speak. It's not. It's an engineering roadmap. And they're executing it one integration at a time.
Here's the thing that matters if you're running a hotel (especially an independent). The competitive advantage hotels have always held over short-term rentals is the bundled experience. You check in, there's a concierge, there's a restaurant, there's a shuttle, there's someone who can book you a tour or call you a cab. The Airbnb guest had to figure all of that out themselves... different apps, different platforms, different payment methods. That friction was real. It was a genuine disadvantage of the STR model. And Airbnb is systematically removing it. Every service they integrate into the app is one less reason a guest needs what a hotel lobby provides. I talked to an independent operator last month who told me his most reliable source of guest goodwill was arranging airport pickups. "It's the first thing they experience," he said. "Sets the tone for the whole stay." Now imagine that touchpoint belongs to Airbnb before the guest even lands.
What I want people to understand is the technology play underneath this. Welcome Pickups isn't some random vendor bolted onto a booking flow. Their system is designed to sync with reservation data... pickup times adjust based on flight tracking, the driver has the guest's name and destination pre-loaded, and the whole thing is managed within the same interface where the guest manages their stay. That's real integration, not duct tape. (Trust me, I know the difference.) For context, most hotel shuttle and car service arrangements still involve the front desk calling a number, confirming a pickup time verbally, and hoping the driver shows up. Airbnb just automated the entire workflow and embedded it into the booking confirmation. The UX gap between "I'll call the car service for you" and "your ride is already booked, tap here for details" is enormous. And that gap is where guest loyalty lives.
The US isn't included yet. That's the one piece of breathing room. But if you think Airbnb is launching in 125 international cities as a permanent stopping point, you haven't been watching this company operate. The pattern is clear... test internationally, refine the product, launch domestically with scale. The question for hotel operators isn't whether this comes to your market. It's whether you'll have built your own version of trip integration before it does... or whether you'll be standing in the lobby wondering why the guest didn't need anything from you between booking and checkout.
Here's what I'd be doing if I were running an independent or a small portfolio right now. Stop thinking about Airbnb as an accommodation competitor and start thinking about them as a platform competitor. The accommodation piece was phase one. This is phase two. Look at your guest journey from booking to departure and identify every touchpoint where the guest currently leaves your ecosystem... airport transport, local experiences, dining reservations. Those are your vulnerabilities. If you're a GM at a 150-key independent in a leisure market, talk to your local car service about a white-label booking link you can embed in your confirmation emails. It doesn't have to be fancy. It has to be frictionless. The hotel that owns the pre-arrival experience owns the guest relationship. The one that waits for the guest to walk through the door has already lost the first impression to whoever got there first.