Why hotel businesses? There are many different hotel brands to choose from, pricing is transparent, photos/reviews are available on many websites, customer service at the chains take care of complaints pretty well, and there has been a ton of new hotel room supply added.
I started staying in AirBNB's around 2013 because I could get a kitchen, e.g. for a week-long stay. I like drinking water and not eating out 2-3 times a day, every day, for a week!
I was staying by myself, but I've heard from traveling families that hotels are a big hassle for them because they lack a kitchen. Imagine feeding a couple kids while staying for a week. That cost will really add up if you're eating out 3 times a day.
The standard hotel practice of giving you ice but nothing else, so you spend on expensive drinks and water, is pretty obnoxious in my book.
The little fridges stocked with $5 bags of chips are also obnoxious.
Another reason is that I'm not limited to "airport-hotel" land, which feels the same in every city. (Admittedly, this is something hotels can't easily fix.)
Also, the prices for AirBNB's were significantly more varied. At the low end, you could get one room in an apartment occupied by others, etc.
> Also, the prices for AirBNB's were significantly more varied.
As expected, since complying with fire and other safety codes, taxes, zoning rules, brand standards, and other business costs exist.
Kitchens are offered in various brands by Hilton/Marriott/IHG. I haven’t had Airport hotel land issues in big cities, but most other places restrict hotels from being in areas by restricting zoning... since residents in these places don’t want to be near hotels.
My point though, was that the hotel market seems to be operating pretty efficiently, with plenty of good choices available for consumers. Price might be higher, but most societies have decided it’s worth it to enforce certain standards upon them. This is different from how the taxi market was, where online booking, payment, and rating vastly raised the standards for everyone.
"Extended stay" places have at least limited kitchens. I often stay at them for the typically more comfortable sitting area but having a fridge can be useful too. I mostly don't use the kitchen though.
AirBnB did make renting vacation homes and the like more convenient. Even if hotels aren't really broken, the vacation rental services were very fragmented and mostly not great.
A lot depends on what you're looking for. On vacation, I do sometimes like something with a bit more "character." TBH though, most of the time I just want reliable with a 24 hour desk, the ability to leave luggage before I can check in or after I check out, etc.
The last AirBnb I stayed in was sparkling clean and totally infested with cockroaches. And they had the nerve to tell me they couldn't get me a full refund, and that I should be used to staying in lower-end places. In the end my fiance and I had to book a hotel anyway, at great inconvenience to ourselves and with no guarantee from AirBnb that they would refund anything. That was way more inconvenient than not having a kitchen for a few days.
So the flip side of it is that you're rolling the dice and AirBnb doesn't actually have a way to guarantee anything for you the way a hotel would.
Be gentle please, I understand and agree that these industries got complacent but these are people. I think our societies should integrate this 'kick' phases to make them smoother and more respectable rather than have toxic competitors attack them.
You've been posting flamebait and unsubstantive comments quite a bit to HN lately, and we've already asked you not to. If you keep doing this we will have to ban you. I don't want to do that, so please read the site guidelines and follow them from now on: https://hackernews.hn/newsguidelines.html.