The Pain of Too Much Choice
For years, the promise of online travel agencies was endless choice. But that promise quickly became a burden. Faced with hundreds of hotels in a single city, we developed coping mechanisms: filtering by price, sorting by review score, and scrolling until
our thumbs ached. This “analysis paralysis” is a well-documented phenomenon where an overabundance of options leads to stress and indecision. You might be looking for a “quiet, family-friendly hotel near the museums in Chicago with a pool,” but translating that desire into a series of filter clicks is often a clunky, imperfect process. You're left manually cross-referencing reviews, maps, and amenity lists, hoping you didn't miss the perfect spot buried on page 12.
Enter the AI Travel Assistant
The new wave of AI integration on major travel sites aims to solve this exact problem by letting you search the way you think. Instead of clicking boxes, you can now have a conversation. These tools, powered by large language models similar to ChatGPT, are designed to understand natural, conversational language and deliver personalized, curated shortlists. They act as a smart filter, capable of interpreting nuanced requests that traditional search filters can’t handle. They can understand context, sentiment from reviews, and complex combinations of preferences, making the initial search far more efficient and a lot less painful.
Expedia’s Conversational Planning
Expedia has been one of the most vocal proponents of this new tech. Within the Expedia app, you can now tap to chat with an AI assistant. The magic here is the conversational flow. You can start broad, like “plan me a trip to Austin for a music festival,” and the AI will ask clarifying questions about your budget, travel dates, and vibe. More importantly for shortlisting stays, it automatically saves hotels you discuss into a “trip” within the app, creating a visual, collaborative shortlist. You can ask it things like, “Which of these has better reviews for its breakfast?” or “Find me something similar but closer to downtown.” It’s designed to eliminate the need to constantly re-enter your search criteria and compare options across multiple screens.
Kayak’s AI-Powered Search
Kayak, part of Booking Holdings, has integrated its own AI tool, accessible directly from its search page. Kayak’s version excels at specific, budget-conscious queries. You can type in requests like, “Show me hotels in Miami Beach for under $200 a night with a rooftop pool in March,” and it will generate a list that bypasses the standard filter-and-sort process. It can also handle more abstract requests about destinations, like “Where can I fly from NYC for a weekend trip for under $400?” While its primary function is still centered on flights and hotels, this conversational search layer makes it much faster to get to a relevant set of options. It’s less about planning an entire trip and more about accelerating the initial discovery phase.
Booking.com and AI-Summarized Reviews
While Booking.com also has an AI Trip Planner in beta for building itineraries, one of the most useful AI features rolling out across the industry is the AI-powered summary. Airbnb and Booking.com are using AI to read through thousands of guest reviews for a property and distill them into a few digestible sentences. Instead of skimming dozens of individual comments to see if a hotel is “loud” or if the Wi-Fi is “unreliable,” an AI summary might state: “Many guests praise the central location and friendly staff, but several mentioned street noise at night.” This allows you to get the collective wisdom of past visitors in seconds, making the final decision between two or three shortlisted properties much easier.














