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Airbnb Just Became Your Guest's Car Service. And You Didn't Even Know It Happened.

Airbnb's new private car transfer service through Welcome Pickups is live in 125 cities, and it's not really about rides... it's about owning the guest journey from airport to checkout, which is exactly the territory hotels have been slowly surrendering for a decade.

Airbnb Just Became Your Guest's Car Service. And You Didn't Even Know It Happened.
Available Analysis

So here's what actually happened. Airbnb cut a deal with a company called Welcome Pickups to offer private car transfers directly inside the Airbnb app. Book a stay, tap a button, and a driver meets you at the airport with your name on a sign. 125 cities. Average rating from the pilot: 4.96 out of 5. No extra Airbnb fee... Welcome Pickups sets the price, Airbnb takes a revenue share. Clean. Simple. And if you're running a hotel, this should bother you more than it probably does right now.

Look, this isn't about car rides. Nobody at Airbnb sat around thinking "you know what the world needs? Another airport transfer option." This is about something much bigger and much more deliberate. Since May 2025, Airbnb has been methodically bolting services onto its platform... grocery delivery through Instacart, hotel bookings, and now ground transportation. CEO Brian Chesky has said publicly he wants "one app and one brand, where every part of the trip makes the other parts stronger." That's not a mission statement. That's an architecture diagram. And every service they add is another reason a traveler never has to leave the Airbnb ecosystem to plan, book, or experience a trip. The hotel industry has a word for this when brands do it. It's called "loyalty ecosystem lock-in." Airbnb just doesn't use a points program to do it.

Here's what I keep coming back to. Welcome Pickups already partners with over 1,500 hotels. They're not new to hospitality... they've been providing airport transfers as a white-label service for properties for years. So the technology works. The driver network exists. The operational model is proven. What Airbnb did isn't build something new. They plugged into something that already worked and made it native to their booking flow. That's the part that should make technology people pay attention, because the integration pattern here is smart. Guest books a stay, transfer option surfaces contextually in the Trips tab, booking is completed in the same interface. No app-switching. No separate confirmation emails. No friction. It's the kind of UX that hotel tech vendors have been promising for a decade and mostly failing to deliver (because "seamless" is easy to say in a pitch deck and brutally hard to build against a PMS from 2014).

The real question is what this means for how hotels think about the guest journey. For years, the industry has talked about "owning the guest experience" while systematically outsourcing pieces of it. OTAs own the booking. Google owns the search. Airlines own the flight. And now Airbnb is making a play for the transfer... which, if you think about it, is the guest's literal first physical experience of their trip. The moment they land. The first impression. Hotels that offer airport shuttles or partner with car services know how powerful that touchpoint is. A driver holding a sign with your name is not just logistics. It's brand experience. And Airbnb just claimed it.

I talked to a hotelier last month who told me his property's concierge used to arrange 30-40 airport transfers a week through a local car service. Revenue share, guest loyalty touchpoint, the whole thing. He said that number has dropped to maybe 15 in the last year because guests are arranging their own rides through apps before they even check in. "By the time they get to my front desk," he said, "half the trip is already planned and none of it went through us." That's the pattern here. It's not that Airbnb's car service is going to destroy hotel revenue. It's that every service Airbnb adds is another micro-decision the guest makes outside the hotel's influence. And micro-decisions compound. Airbnb is playing a long game... Chesky has floated the idea that Services and Experiences could eventually drive over $1 billion in annual revenue... and the game is about making Airbnb the default interface for the entire trip, not just the room.

Operator's Take

Here's what I'd actually do this week. If your property offers airport transfers, car service partnerships, or any kind of transportation coordination for guests... audit how many guests are actually using it versus six months ago. If that number is declining, you're already losing the touchpoint and you need to understand why. For independents especially, this is about defending the pieces of the guest journey you can still own. Talk to your car service partner about making the booking process easier... text-based confirmation, pre-arrival scheduling, something that doesn't require the guest to call a front desk and wait on hold. The bar just got set by an app that does it in two taps. If you're a branded property, bring this up with your revenue team. Not as a panic item... as a competitive intelligence item. Airbnb is systematically building the full-trip platform that hotel brands have been talking about for years. The question isn't whether they'll succeed. It's whether your brand is going to respond with a real product or another PowerPoint.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: Airbnb
👤 Brian Chesky 🏢 Instacart 🏢 Airbnb 📊 airport transfers 📊 guest journey 📊 loyalty ecosystem lock-in 🏢 Welcome Pickups
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.