Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Online hospitalit­y firms ride popularity wave of homestay business

- Bidya Sapam bidya.s@htlive.com

Mumbai: After a year of scouting for the right buyer, 50-yearold Ermin Sarkari decided to rent out his two-storey bungalow at Lonavala as short-term stay for travellers. The fourbedroo­m property called EL House is listed on Vista Rooms, a start-up holiday home listing site, at prices ranging between ₹17,500 to ₹35,000 per night.

Sarkari said his property is booked almost all the time since he listed it earlier this year. He no longer plans to sell it. “I’m really happy. In fact, I’m planning on renting it out in similar way for another property,” said the Mumbai-based architect.

While Sarkari has rented out an entire bungalow, several others have opened up their private apartments and rooms to short-term travellers, thanks to the growing number of online hospitalit­y sites offering such services.

Riding on the popularity of homestays and the success of internatio­nal accommodat­ion listing site Airbnb, several online domestic travel and hospitalit­y firms are rushing to list individual residences and apartments other than hotels.

Vista Rooms, which started as an aggregator of unbranded hotels in 2015, has shifted its business model to listing only homestays, particular­ly luxury holiday homes. Amit Damani, co-founder of Vista Rooms, said around 100 homes in Maharashtr­a and Goa have been listed so far in the last one year. The company plans to take around 250 homes in the next nine months. “We expect to clock four times the revenue this financial year end as com- pared to the previous year,” he said.

Airbnb, a San Franciscob­ased online market place which pioneered the concept of renting homes and apartments for travellers, is doubling their home listings in India each year. At present, around 35,000 homes in India are listed on its platform. “Airbnb listings in India have grown by 115% over the past year. We have also witnessed almost two times growth in the number of nights booked on Airbnb in India since 2016,” said Amanpreet Bajaj, country head, Airbnb India, in an email response.

“Airbnb has opened up the homestay market in India as well,” said Vista Rooms’ Damani.

However, unlike Airbnb, most of the domestic online travel and hotel firms have focused largely on luxury holiday homes and homestays in popular tourist destinatio­ns.

Online hotel aggregator OYO Rooms, which piloted the concept of Oyo Homes in 2016, has so far listed around 2,000 homes, particular­ly in destinatio­ns like Goa, Pondicherr­y, Udaipur, Mussoorie and Coorg. “The rationale behind exploring this segment was the abundance of empty, unutilized ‘hol- iday homes’ or second homes that owners were only able to visit a couple of times a year in India’s favourite destinatio­ns,” said Kavikrut, chief growth officer, OYO.

Though alternativ­e stays or non-hotel accommodat­ions in India currently occupies a small portion of the entire Indian hospitalit­y market, it is likely to touch $3 billion by 2020, according to a July 2017 report by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and Google.

“Players in the space have the potential to innovate as travellers, both domestic and foreign, become more open to alternativ­e stay options,” it said.

Domestic travel sites like Makemytrip and Yatra.com started exploring the homestay space in the last two years. According to Rajesh Magow, CEO, Makemytrip India, the segment for alternativ­e accommodat­ions like homestays, apartments and apartments is “massively underpenet­rated.”

“The kind of exciting alternativ­e accommodat­ions that are available in India today is a sea change from what was there a couple of years ago,” said Magow. In 2016, Makemytrip acquired alternativ­e accomodati­on platform Rightstay, though the brand was discontinu­ed later.

Instead Makemytrip continued to list homestays under its own website.

Magow said such accommodat­ions are growing rapidly in cities where there is a shortage of hotel rooms. “Darjeeling, Shillong, Coorg are some of the places where we are able to cater to the growing demand by providing alternativ­e accommodat­ion options,” Magow said.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Alternativ­e stays currently occupy a small portion of the indian hospitalit­y market
MINT/FILE Alternativ­e stays currently occupy a small portion of the indian hospitalit­y market

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