Times Colonist

Airbnb to open up Cuban listings to global travellers

- MICHAEL WEISSENSTE­IN

HAVANA — Online lodging service Airbnb is allowing travellers from around the world to book stays in private homes in Cuba after the San Francisco-based company received a special authorizat­ion from the Obama administra­tion, Airbnb announced Sunday.

Airbnb was the first major American company to enter Cuba after U.S. President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro declared détente on Dec. 17, 2014. The service handles online listing, booking and payments for people looking to stay in private homes instead of hotels. Cuba has become its fastest-growing market, with about 4,000 homes added over the last year.

Airbnb had only been allowed to let U.S. travellers use its services in Cuba under a relatively limited Obama administra­tion exception to the half-century old U.S. trade embargo on the island. The expansion of that licence gives Airbnb the ability to become a one-stop shop for travellers seeking lodging in private homes, which have seen a flood of demand from travellers seeking an alternativ­e to state-run hotels.

Airbnb’s new authorizat­ion was announced on the morning of an historic three-day trip by Obama to Cuba and a day after Starwood Hotels announced that it had signed a deal to run three Cuban hotels, becoming the first U.S. hotel company in Cuba since Fidel Castro took power in 1959 and took over the island’s hotels. Airbnb said world travellers could begin booking in Cuba in April 2, the anniversar­y of the country’s start of operations on the island.

All hotels in Cuba are now owned by government agencies and many are known for poor service and decrepit infrastruc­ture. Foreign hotel chains operate some of the island’s larger and more luxurious hotels, which are running at full capacity, thanks to a post-détente boom in tourism that saw visitor numbers surge nearly 20 per cent last year.

One of the first openings in Cuba’s centrally planned economy came when the government allowed families to rent rooms in their homes for a few dollars a night, starting in the 1990s. That has become a full-blown private hospitalit­y industry, with many Cubans using capital from relatives abroad and even foreign investors to transform crumbling homes into the equivalent­s of small boutique hotels.

Many websites allow foreigners to book Cuban private homes, known as “casas particular­es,” but none has emerged as a dominant player. Many travellers still find it hard to guarantee bookings and make electronic or credit-card payments. Airbnb is promoting its service as a solution to those problems in Cuba.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL, AP ?? Taxi drivers wait outside hotels in Havana.
REBECCA BLACKWELL, AP Taxi drivers wait outside hotels in Havana.
 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Motorcade of U.S. President Barack Obama travels down the Malecon in Havana during Obama’s recent historic three-day trip to Cuba.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Motorcade of U.S. President Barack Obama travels down the Malecon in Havana during Obama’s recent historic three-day trip to Cuba.

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