I tossed food in the fridge, washed my travel mug in the sink, plopped on the sofa to page through a magazine and finally tested the bed, the ultimate barometer of any overnight accommodation. It was cushy with just the right amount of underlying firmness. I'd sleep well — plus be well-fed, thanks to the microwave, stovetop and dishwasher.
I could expect a gleaming stainless-steel kitchen from the homes I've rented through Airbnb. But this time I hadn't rented an apartment or home. I'd checked into a $120-per-night hotel near a shopping mall in suburban West Des Moines, Iowa, for a weekend soccer tournament.
The homey touches surprised me, but they shouldn't have. As Airbnb, HomeAway, VRBO and other short-term home-sharing companies lure vacationers with kitchens, backyards and the chance to mingle with locals, hotels are competing with amenities of their own.
Some, like Marriott's Element brand, bring a home kitchen to your hotel room. Others are cooking up perks that a single home or apartment never could, such as fresh-baked cookies all day or performances by local musicians in inviting communal spaces.
While most vacationers check into hotels, many are opting instead to rent part of or an entire home. Research firm Skift reported last year that home-rental earnings globally reached $82.9 billion in 2017. That's less than one-sixth of the hotel industry's $512.3 billion take. But in a sign that home-sharing is becoming a force, Skift predicts that such rentals will grow to $132.5 billion by 2022.
HomeAway, launched in 2004, lists more than 2 million houses, castles, cabins and other lodging options worldwide, as does VRBO, which HomeAway owns (Expedia is the parent company of both). Since its start in 2008, Airbnb has grown to include 5 million listings, ranging from a bedroom in someone's apartment to entire mansions.
Lure of the local
I opted for one of those Airbnb listings for the first time when I stayed in Rome two years ago. I shifted from a hotel for one main reason: My family would be joined by a friend who needed his own bedroom, so I wanted a three-bedroom apartment with a living room where we could comfortably converge.
My search had only just begun when I discerned another advantage: price. For less than the cost of two hotel rooms, we landed in a penthouse apartment in a beautiful building with a wraparound balcony.