The Deal That Never Was
In the mid-2010s, the vacation rental market was a two-horse race. On one side was Airbnb, the disruptive Silicon Valley darling that let you book a spare room or an entire apartment in a city. On the other was HomeAway, the established giant that owned
legacy brands like Vrbo and focused on traditional vacation rentals—think beach houses and mountain cabins. A merger seemed logical. Combining Airbnb’s urban, experience-driven user base with HomeAway’s destination-market dominance would have created a company with unparalleled scale. Wall Street saw the potential, but the deal never materialized. In 2015, travel conglomerate Expedia swooped in and acquired HomeAway for a staggering $3.9 billion, effectively taking it off the market for good. The question that lingered was: why didn't Airbnb make a move? The answer wasn't about money, but something much deeper.
A Fundamental Clash of Models
To understand Airbnb’s hesitation, you have to look at the DNA of both companies. HomeAway, founded in 2005, pioneered the online vacation rental space but operated more like a classifieds site. Its business was built around professional property managers and second-home owners in traditional vacation spots. It was a platform for finding a place to stay. Airbnb, launched in 2008, was selling something entirely different: belonging. Its model was built on the idea of the “sharing economy,” where ordinary people shared their primary homes and offered unique experiences. One company was transactional; the other was aspirational. HomeAway specialized in entire homes for families planning a week-long getaway. Airbnb catered to younger, solo, and business travelers looking for everything from a shared room for a night to a quirky apartment for a weekend. A merger would have been like trying to mix oil and water—two distinct customer bases, two different types of inventory, and two opposing philosophies on what travel should be.
The Gospel of Culture
The biggest obstacle, however, was culture. For Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky, company culture isn’t a buzzword; it's the entire operating system. In a famous internal memo, Chesky recounted how investor Peter Thiel’s most important advice was, “Don’t fuck up the culture.” For Chesky, culture is the “foundation for all future innovation.” It’s a belief system that allows a company to function with trust instead of process. Airbnb’s culture was built around a mission to help people “belong anywhere.” They hired for it, designed for it, and believed it was their most valuable asset. HomeAway was a successful, well-run company, but its culture was that of a more traditional digital marketplace. Integrating HomeAway’s massive, manager-driven inventory and corporate structure would have risked diluting the very thing Chesky believed made Airbnb special. It would have been a massive acquisition that could have broken the “machine that creates your products.”
Winning By Not Buying
Ultimately, the hidden reason Airbnb passed on its biggest competitor wasn't arrogance or a lack of foresight. It was a strategic decision to win on its own terms. The leadership believed their community-centric, host-driven model was fundamentally superior and more defensible in the long run. Rather than spending billions to absorb a company with a conflicting identity, they chose to invest that energy in perfecting their own platform and expanding their global footprint. They bet that they could beat HomeAway by being different, not by becoming them. While Expedia saw HomeAway as a way to quickly enter the alternative accommodations market, Airbnb saw itself as creating an entirely new category. They didn't want to just be the biggest vacation rental site; they wanted to be the definitive platform for a new era of travel.













