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Airbnb Wants To Run Your Entire Trip

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Airbnb is expanding beyond accommodation with new features like grocery delivery, airport pickups and trip planning tools. Credit : https://news.airbnb.com

Booking a holiday through Airbnb used to be fairly simple. You opened the app, found an apartment or villa, checked the reviews, argued with yourself about the cleaning fee for five minutes and finally booked the place.  Now Airbnb wants to handle almost the entire trip.

The company is preparing a major expansion that will introduce services like airport pickups, luggage storage, grocery deliveries, boutique hotels and even car rentals directly through the app. In other words, Airbnb no longer wants to be seen simply as a platform for holiday flats.

It wants to become the place where people organise everything connected to travelling.

And honestly, the idea probably makes sense for a lot of travellers.

Most people already spend half their holiday switching between different apps anyway. One for accommodation, another for taxis, another for activities, another for maps and usually several more buried somewhere in your emails containing booking confirmations you can never find when you actually need them.

Airbnb clearly thinks people are tired of that.

The app is starting to look more like a complete travel planner

Some of the changes are arriving this summer and they go well beyond accommodation.According to Airbnb, users will soon be able to organise airport pickups in around 160 cities worldwide. The platform is also adding luggage storage services for travellers arriving before check in or leaving hours after checkout.

Anyone who has dragged a suitcase around a city for an entire afternoon will probably understand why that feature alone could become popular very quickly.

Then there is the grocery delivery service.

Airbnb says guests in selected US cities will be able to order shopping directly to their accommodation before arriving or during their stay. So instead of landing late at night and desperately searching for an open supermarket, travellers could theoretically arrive to a fridge that is already stocked.

It sounds small, but it is exactly the kind of thing modern travel apps are increasingly trying to sell: convenience.

The company is also entering another area that feels much more ambitious : Car rentals.

Through the app, users will reportedly be shown vehicles available near their accommodation along with suggestions based on the size of the group or the type of trip being planned.

And because Airbnb wants people to actually use the feature, it plans to offer travel credit incentives for future bookings too.

Airbnb is also moving much closer to the hotel industry

For years, Airbnb positioned itself as the alternative to hotels.

Now things are getting a bit more complicated.

The platform announced it is adding thousands of boutique and independent hotels in cities including Madrid, Paris and New York. That means travellers opening Airbnb may increasingly find hotel rooms sitting beside apartments and holiday rentals inside the same search results.

And in reality, many users probably will not care very much about the distinction anymore if the booking process feels easier.

Especially younger travellers.People are becoming less loyal to specific types of accommodation and more interested in whatever feels practical, flexible and simple to organise.

That shift is part of why Airbnb appears to be changing strategy so aggressively now.

The company also knows business travellers remain a huge market. Traditional hotels still dominate that space because many people prefer consistency, reception desks and predictable services when travelling for work.

Airbnb seems to be trying to capture some of those customers too while still keeping the more relaxed aesthetic that made the platform popular originally.

Whether hotels like it or not, the lines separating travel apps, accommodation platforms and online travel agencies are becoming increasingly blurred.

Artificial intelligence is quietly becoming part of the experience too

Like almost every major platform right now, Airbnb is also pushing further into artificial intelligence.

But compared with some companies making vague promises about “AI powered futures”, Airbnb’s approach feels more practical.

The platform says it is now using AI systems to summarise over a billion reviews into shorter overviews designed to help people make decisions faster.

Which, honestly, many travellers will probably appreciate.Reading Airbnb reviews can sometimes feel endless, especially when you are trying to work out whether “cosy” means charming or simply tiny.

The app is also adding collaborative trip planning tools so groups can organise itineraries together more easily. Maps, accommodation details, activities and travel times can all supposedly be shared inside the same space instead of disappearing across different group chats.

There is also a more social angle appearing.

Airbnb wants users to see recommendations connected to friends and contacts who already visited certain places or made previous bookings. The idea is clearly to make the platform feel less transactional and more personal.

At the same time, customer support is becoming increasingly automated through AI powered assistance available in multiple languages, with voice support expected later this year.

Some people will love that.Others will probably miss speaking to actual humans.

But either way, Airbnb is changing very quickly and the company seems convinced that travellers want fewer separate apps and more all in one systems.

Whether that eventually makes travelling simpler or simply turns Airbnb into another giant tech ecosystem remains to be seen.

For now though, one thing is becoming obvious.The company that once mainly helped people rent holiday apartments is trying to become something much bigger.

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Fuengirola Feria Redesigned Without Motorhomes

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Newly painted spaces not thought of for motorhomes. Credit: David White

Fuengirola council teams have cleared motorhomes and caravans from the Feria grounds and repainted all parking and market stall markings with stricter dimensions to stop oversized vehicles.

None of the fresh spaces measure large enough for a motorhome, so none can park legally inside the lines anymore. Motorhomes or caravan towers that attempt overnight stays by crossing the designated lines could receive fines reaching €200.

Motorhome bone of contention

Neighbours in surrounding flats have been voicing complaints for years over the site operating as an unofficial and free camping ground without proper facilities, particularly for grey water discharge that creates unpleasant smells and potential hygiene hazards in the neighbourhood.

Motorhome websites continue to recommend Fuengirola Feria grounds as a free overnight parking spot even after these updates took effect. Motorhomers, while welcome holidaymakers in Fuengirola, will now have to find legal pay sites to camp at.

Feria grounds gain over 700 regulated parking bays

Services from Fuengirola Council push forward with the council parking plan through reorganisation at the Feria grounds. This work supplies more than 700 units for car parking and adds to nearly 500 created earlier in the mandate for a running total above 1,200 spaces.

Mayor Ana Mula inspected the road markings and stated that the Feria grounds always acted as a major parking zone but never received proper regulation or ordering. Teams examined methods to use the asphalt patches at the entrance where fairground attractions normally locate, plus the edges of central and lateral streets.

Changes in the central zone around the casetas have now introduced one-way traffic heading to the Palacio de la Paz, while parking becomes possible on both road sides. Mula said that these modifications will make 700 parking places available for local residents and bring the overall figure close to 1,200 from fresh actions and reorderings such as this in Fuengirola.

Additional parking expansions planned for coming months

Works begin shortly on the initial phase of Montaña del Deporte in Los Pacos to introduce 56 extra spaces in that district.

Designs also include over 1,000 parking spots under the future Santa Fe-Antonio Basilio stadium in Los Boliches once the licensing contracting finishes.

Fuengirola residents at the end of their tether with motorhomes and caravans taking over

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Short-Term Rentals Registry Scrapped In Spain

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Renting short-term made easier. Credit: ronstik – Shutterstock

Owners of holiday homes in Spain who rent out their properties while they are away are about to gain clear advantages from a Spanish Supreme Court ruling that eliminates the national registry for short-term tourist rentals.

This decision overturns a requirement introduced by the coalition government last July forcing property owners to register and obtain a number before advertising on platforms such as Airbnb. This will come as a relief to thousands of holiday homeowners who rent out their property when they are not around.

Several regional governments challenged the measure successfully, arguing the central government overstepped the mark in its powers in the area. Spain’s highest court agreed that the state lacked any authority to impose a national registry on top of similar ones already operating at a regional level. Data sharing requirements for the platform continue as they were before under the court decision.

Holiday rental landlords gain from less red tape

Property owners will gain from simpler processes when listing properties for short-term stays. Compliance becomes less complicated and less expensive for those who already hold valid regional licences. Time previously spent on duplicate paperwork can now support other aspects of the rental business such as marketing and guest services.

Regional rules shape rental landscape for owners

Spain contains around 3.5 million second homes, or holiday homes, that represent roughly 13 to 14.6 per cent of the total housing stock of 27 million dwellings. Foreigners, especially British individuals who cannot spend the entire year in Spain due to post-Brexit Schengen rules, own many of these properties.

Before the national registry, autonomous regional communities handled rules independently with wide variation in strictness. Catalonia, especially Barcelona, and the Balearic Islands applied the toughest controls through compulsory licences zoning limits, bans, moratoriums and fines up to €600,000. The Valencian Community followed closely with urban reports and caps in high-pressure zones. However, Andalucia and Galicia offered more flexible approaches via straightforward declarations and low-cost processes that suited compliant owners in areas such as Costa del Sol. That system now comes back into effect following the court’s decision on government overreach. These regional frameworks will stay in force and continue to determine approvals, operations and local caps.

Platforms keep data sharing duties under EU rules

Rental platforms maintain an obligation to provide data about their listings to the authorities. European Union regulations still permit collection of such information on short-term accommodation without need for a national registry. EU authorities can still access details needed for enforcement and statistics through already established digital channels.

Outlook brightens for short-term accommodation providers

Individuals who rent out holiday homes will now experience greater ease in managing their businesses. Focus now changes back toward guest satisfaction and property maintenance instead of extra national bureaucracy. Spain continues to attract large numbers of visitors who prefer apartment stays over hotel options, with nearly one third choosing individual accommodation. This outcome supports balanced regulation while respecting regional competences in tourism and housing matters.

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La Cala De Mijas Walkathon For Water

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Those in the area of La Cala de Mijas are being invited to take part in the international Walkathon for Water on Wednesday, May 27, as the town joins a Europe-wide campaign raising awareness about the global water crisis.

Organised by the We Are Water Foundation together with resorts managed by Hilton Grand Vacations, the event is raising money and awareness about the lack of access to safe drinking water affecting millions and millions of people worldwide. The symbolic five-kilometre route reflects the horrendously long distance many children and families walk every day just to collect water. 

Walkathon for Water returns after successful previous events

The Walkathon for Water has already held multiple successful walks across Europe, with the initiative now entering its fourth year. Previous events attracted much interest with more than 1,200 participants from several countries and raised funds for clean water and sanitation projects in India, Tanzania and Colombia. 

The Mijas walk will take place on Wednesday, May 27 at 10am and is one of an incredible 20 walks across eight countries during the year. 

Mijas charity walk gets people talking about global water shortage crisis

The aim of the events is to highlight the reality faced by more than two billion people globally who still to this day lack access to safe drinking water. Every kilometre walked during the campaign symbolises reducing the burden carried by vulnerable communities searching for water each day.

Shocking facts from the charity tells us that water shortage and bad sanitation are the biggest causes of child malnutrition and other life-threatening childhood diseases. Over 1,000 children die every day from diseases caused by lack of safe water, and worldwide more than 2 billion people do not have access to safe water. 

Participants can register online with a minimum €5 donation, with proceeds supporting humanitarian water and sanitation projects. Local schools are taking part to raise the much needed funds for a very important cause. 

For more information visit the We are Water foundation website. 

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