Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels
Limited inventory and opportunistic travellers have kept the windfall in check
THE MOON would not start to move between Earth and the sun until the morning of April 8th. But the business impact of this month’s total solar eclipse, which started over the Pacific Ocean, cut a path across North America and ended in the Atlantic, was already plain to see. According to Jamie Lane of AirDNA, a travel-data firm, on a typical Sunday night in April around 30% of homes listed for short-term rental on Airbnb or Vrbo in areas in or around the eclipse’s path were occupied. A remarkable 92% of listings within the zone of totality had been booked for April 7th. Demand for homes just a few towns outside this roughly 180km-wide strip had barely changed.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “No-sun seekers”
Business April 13th 2024
- Think Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivals
- Who wields the power in the world’s supply chains?
- Productivity gurus through time: a match-up
- Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels
- TSMC’s American chipmaking plans grow $25bn more ambitious
- Generative AI has a clean-energy problem
More from Business
Germans are world champions of calling in sick
It’s easy and it pays well
Knowing what your colleagues earn
The pros and cons of greater pay transparency
A $500bn investment plan says a lot about Trump’s AI priorities
It’s build, baby, build
Donald Trump’s America will not become a tech oligarchy
Reasons not to panic about the tech-industrial complex
OpenAI’s latest model will change the economics of software
The more reasoning it does, the more computer power it uses
Donald Trump once tried to ban TikTok. Now can he save it?
To keep the app alive in America, he must persuade China to sell up