Airbnb, Inc. (NASDAQ: ABNB) Q4 2021 earnings call dated Feb. 15, 2022
Corporate Participants:
Ellie Mertz — Vice President of Finance
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Colin Sebastian — Baird — Analyst
Naved Khan — Truist Securities — Analyst
Stephen Ju — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Bernie McTernan — Needham & Company — Analyst
Deepak Mathivanan — Wolfe — Analyst
Mario Lu — Barclays — Analyst
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Brian Nowak — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Brian Fitzgerald — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Doug Anmuth — JPMorgan — Analyst
Lloyd Walmsley — UBS — Analyst
Andrew Boone — JMP Securities — Analyst
Mark Mahaney — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Kevin Kopelman — Cowen and Company — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good afternoon and thank you for joining Airbnb’s Earnings Conference Call for the Fourth Quarter of 2021. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded and will be available for replay from the Investor Relations section of Airbnb’s website following this call.
I’ll now hand over to Ellie Mertz, Vice President of Finance. Please go ahead.
Ellie Mertz — Vice President of Finance
Good afternoon and welcome to Airbnb’s fourth quarter of 2021 earnings call. Thank you for joining us today. On the call today we have Airbnb’s Co-Founder and CEO, Brian Chesky; and our Chief Financial Officer, Dave Stevenson. Earlier today we issued a shareholder letter with our financial results and commentary for our fourth quarter and full year of 2021. These items were also posted on the Investor Relations section of Airbnb’s website. During the call, we’ll make brief opening remarks and then spend the remainder of time on Q&A.
Before I turn it over to Brian, I would like to remind everyone that we will be making forward-looking statements on this call that involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements due to a variety of factors. These factors are described under forward-looking statements in our shareholder letter and in our most recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We urge you to consider these factors and remind you that we undertake no obligation to update the information contained on this call to reflect subsequent events or circumstances. You should be aware that these statements should be considered estimates only and are not guarantee of future performance.
Also during this call, we will discuss some non-GAAP financial measures. We’ve provided reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures in the Shareholder Letter posted to our Investor Relations website. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for our GAAP results.
With that, I’ll pass the call to Brian.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
All right. Thank you very much, Ellie, and good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for joining. I’m excited to share our Q4 results with you. Q4 was another record quarter and 2021 was the best year in Airbnb’s history. In Q4, revenue was $1.5 billion, our best fourth quarter ever, and exceeded 2019 by 38%. Net income was $55 million, our best Q4 ever compared to a loss in 2019 and adjusted EBITDA was stringent $33 million, also our best Q4 ever.
Our adjusted EBITDA margin was a positive 22% compared to a negative 25% in Q4 2019. This is a huge improvement obviously. Now in Q4 GBV was $11 billion, which surpassed 2019 levels by 32% and was driven by strong ADR. Now even with Omicron Q4 nights and experiences booked were only down 3% compared to 2019 and when you exclude APAC it was actually up 8%.
What our results show is that we’ve been able to respond to this changing world of travel. Nearly two years into the pandemic, it’s clear that we are undergoing the biggest change in travel since the advent of commercial flying. Remote work has untethered many people from the need to be in office and as a result people are spreading out to thousands of towns and cities, staying for weeks, months, or even entire seasons at a time.
For the first time ever, millions of people can now live anywhere and we’ve been able to respond to these changes because our model is inherently adaptable. Our millions of hosts offer nearly every type of home in nearly every community around the world. But it’s not just our model, it’s also our culture of relentless innovation.
In the last year alone, we made more than 150 upgrades in innovations across every aspect of the Airbnb service. This explains why we had our best year in our company’s history despite still being in the midst of a pandemic. Now, there are a number of business trends that have been driving the strong performance. First guests are staying in thousands of small towns and rural communities on Airbnb.
Throughout the pandemic, we’ve seen growing demand for domestic and non-urban travel. In Q4, gross nights booked to non-urban markets was up nearly 45% from Q4 2019 and in the past year alone Airbnb guests stayed in nearly 100,000 towns and cities all around the world. Second, guests are also returning to cities. Q4 nights booked at urban destinations have nearly recovered to Q4 2019 levels and cross-border travel also continues to recover and improved each quarter in 2021.
Guests are planning to travel despite variants and surges. Despite the impact of Omicron in December gross nights booked were up 40% and the cancellation rate was lower than a year ago. In Q1, we are already seeing strong demand for the summer travel season compared to 2019. And finally, guests are not just traveling Airbnb, they are now living on Airbnb. Nearly half of our nights booked in Q4 were for stays of a week or longer. One in five nights were for stays of a month or longer and in the past year alone nearly 175,000 guests stayed for three months or longer.
So, I’m going to fall in the footsteps of our community. Recently, I shared that I too am going to live on Airbnb. Right now, I’m doing this call from Airbnb in Miami and I’ll be staying in a different town or city every couple of weeks. I’ve always wanted to do this, but before the pandemic, I had to be in office every day. Now, I have the flexibility that millions of other guests do on Airbnb. And I also think it’s important as a CEO I deeply understand the nuances and unique opportunities that this new use case on Airbnb will provide.
So, now I want to recap, how we did on last year’s priorities. As you recall for 2021 our single priority last year was to prepare for the incoming travel rebound and to do this we focused on perfecting the end-to-end experience of our core service. This meant educating the world about hosting, recruiting more hosts and setting them up for success, simplifying the guest journey, and delivering world-class service. So, let me just give you a really quick update on each. First, we’ve been educating the world at what makes Airbnb different and that is hosting. In 2021, we launched our first large-scale marketing campaign in five years to educate guests about the benefits of being hosted and inspire more guests to become hosts. It worked. We’ve seen an increase in traffic to our platform in countries we ran the campaign and this is significantly ahead of non-campaign countries where we didn’t run the campaign.
Second, we’ve been recruiting more hosts and setting them up for success. Last year, we redesigned a host onboarding flow making it easier for new hosts to get started and we also introduced our Ask a Superhost program pairing potential hosts with Superhosts to answer their questions. And finally, we created AirCover, top to bottom protection free for every Airbnb host and only offered on Airbnb.
Third, we’ve been simplifying every part of the guest experience. Last year, we introduced I’m Flexible, a whole new way to search on Airbnb when guests are flexible about where and when they are traveling. And guests, since we’ve launched these features, have used I’m Flexible nearly 800 million times. We’ve also shipped dozens of other product features to improve the guest experience. And finally, fourth, we’ve been focused on delivering world-class service to our guests and our hosts. Now, in addition to providing protection for our host through AirCover, we launched dedicated Superhost support. Now dedicated Superhost support provides our most experienced host priority access to our most experienced support agents. And as a result, we’ve seen fewer escalations and faster resolution times increasing overall Superhost satisfaction.
Now, I am incredibly proud of everything we’ve delivered to our guests and hosts in 2021, but it’s important to note, we are not stopping here because in 2022 and beyond what we’re going to do is accelerate our pace innovation and we’re going to focus on three key priorities. Live anywhere on Airbnb, unlock the next generation of hosts, and Airbnb becoming the ultimate host to our community. So, let me just give you a quick preview of each. First, live anywhere on Airbnb. As a result of the pandemic, millions of people can now live anywhere. They are now using Airbnb to travel to thousands of towns and cities staying for weeks, months or even entire seasons at a time.
Some people without families, like me, I can kind of live a bit nomadically staying in different Airbnbs every week or every month. Now people in families probably can’t do that, but we’re seeing people with families are going to have a lot more flexibility over the summer and I think this is why bookings in January for this summer by night booked are up 25% from this time in 2019.
And other people are just going to take more extended weekends. The key point is that every length of stay on Airbnb is going up, whether it’s two nights, three nights, a week, a month or a season, all length of stay except for single nights are up in Airbnb and we want to design for this new world by making it even easier for guests to live on Airbnb.
The second priority is we will unlock the next generation of hosts. With 4 million hosts on Airbnb, we believe that we just scratched the surface in growing our host community. So, what we’ve done is we listen to thousands of people who are thinking about hosting to understand what obstacles there are for them to become a host and what we’re gonna do it systematically address each of these obstacles in order to attract the next generation of hosts on Airbnb.
And finally, Airbnb will become the ultimate host. We believe that Airbnb can be much more than a marketplace that nearly connects guests and hosts. Our goal is to provide the ultimate service for our guests anticipating their needs and going above and beyond just like a good host. Now, by offering a more personalized service we can dramatically improve the experience for millions of guests around the world.
So that’s it. just to summarize Q4 was Airbnb’s best quarter ever, revenue, adjusted EBITDA and net income were all records. We’re in the midst of revolution in travel because people have newfound flexibility in how they live and work. Our adaptable model and our relentless innovation have allowed us to respond to this moment and in 2022 we are going to accelerate our pace of innovation and continue to support this new world of travel.
So with that, Dave and I look forward to answering your questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Colin Sebastian from Baird. Colin, your line is now open.
Colin Sebastian — Baird — Analyst
Great, thanks, good afternoon. Two questions from me. I guess, first off Brian, you recently posted on Twitter, the most popular requests for new functionality or services on the platform for this year. I think crypto payments might have been a top request, but when you talked about acceleration in the pace of innovation, what should we think about in terms of the key areas of focus and how that impacts where you are spending money?
And then secondly maybe just one clarification on the EBITDA outlook for the full year. I think there was commentary on flat margins. Is the context for that a seasonal — or return to seasonal booking trends and ADRs normalizing? Or if that’s not right if you could add some context. Thank you.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yes, thanks very much, Colin. So, why don’t I take the first question and obviously, Dave, I think you can take the second question on EBITDA. So, Colin, with regards to the pace of innovation. Just to kind of create a contrast. last year we created 150 upgrades and innovations. It was the most innovation we’ve ever delivered in any year of our history. And I think this explains why it was probably the best year in our company’s history, but this year we intend to create even bigger leaps with our product. And just to give you a sense of how we’re thinking about it.
Going back to our priorities. We’re seeing that millions of people are not tethered to have to go back to an office five days a week. And what this means as guests are spreading out the thousands of communities all over the world and they are also staying longer. And so we want to design for this world both people just living on Airbnb or just traveling and having more extended vacations.
We also launched I’m Flexible last year and that product has been used 800 million times. Now, this is a really key feature because since the advent of the Internet almost every travel website asks you two questions, where are you going and when are you traveling. And suddenly, I’m Flexible gets us further up the funnel. This allows us to be in the inspiration business and it’s ultimately strategic for Airbnb because if you are flexible about where and when you can travel, we can point demand to where we have supply. So, we’re going to continue to upgrade our product and we’re going to continue to be better host to our guest in those community by providing even better world-class service for them each step of the way.
So, what we’re going to do is continue to invest in the guest experience to adapt to these new behaviors, provide world-class service for them, and then once again, we want to unlock the next generation of hosts. So, we have a whole roadmap where we understand each of the obstacles for people to host, and we’re going to launch products and features this year that will unlock those obstacles and I’m sure that’s going to create a huge plethora of new supply in Airbnb. Dave, you want to take the second question on EBITDA?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure, yeah, we are very proud of the progress we’ve made in our margins in 2021. I mean, we increased them from minus 5% back in 2019 to 27% in 2021. And so it’s obviously a huge improvement and very proud of the work that we’ve done across the board. But also remember that we’re managing for profitability while investing for growth. We’re still very much in the growth mode investing for the future and that’s key for us.
And what we saw in 2021 was that we had a step-change in our marketing expenses and achieved a new level of overall marketing investment as a percentage of revenue and we’ve already achieved that new baseline and likely not to achieve substantial improvement in the marketing expenses as a percentage of revenue this year. And we also made a step-change in our fixed costs and continued improvement in our variable costs. We’ll continue to do that. We’ll get more leverage on fixed and keep improving our variable costs. But lastly, we also saw the tailwind of average daily rate, which definitely helped our margins and as ADRs may moderate this year and as mix in our business changes that will be an offset to some of the further improvements in our fixed cost leverage and variable costs.
So, if ADRs moderate or a little bit less, there’s room for some upside in EBITDA. So, that’s why we’ve given the guidance we have.
Colin Sebastian — Baird — Analyst
Okay, great. Thanks, guys.
Operator
Our next question comes from Naved Khan from Truist Securities. Naved, your line is now open.
Naved Khan — Truist Securities — Analyst
Yeah. Thanks a lot. Two questions, one for Brian and one for Dave. So, Brian, how are you thinking about growth in experiences for 2022 as travel comes back and people engage in more activities and experiences? And Dave, on the margin question, again, how should we think about the growth in other expenses outside of marketing and the variable costs? Namely operation support and product development. Is there supposed to be a significant ramp up or is ADR the primary explanation for why margins can be flat year-on-year?
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yes, hey, Naved. So I will take the first question and Dave you can take the second question on expenses. With regard to experiences, we are very bullish on this product. It should be noted, for example, that the percentage of people that leave 5 star reviews for experiences is even higher to the percentage of people who leave 5 star reviews for homes. So, what guests have told us that they love experiences and I think hosts really depend on the economic income that it offers.
Now in 2020, before the pandemic, we thought that year was going to be a breakout year for experiences, instead, we had to pause the product, but now we are going to be ramping the product back up, it’s going to be a multi-year journey, but I am really excited about the potential for this product. And I think the reason is very simple, I think you can only like play so many video games and stay home and watch so many shows on Netflix before you want to get out of house and you want to do an activity with other people whether it’s traveling even in your own area. And so we think this is going to be a great way to meet other people and also connect with people you care about over our connectivity. Dave, do you want to talk about expenses?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So and we like I said, just a minute ago, we achieved a new baseline in our marketing expense as a percentage of revenue. We already achieved that in 2021, So, there isn’t as much opportunity for improvement in that particular line item going forward. On the operations support area, we are continuing to invest in the community in growth for the support of our guest and host community. So, underlying we’re making improvements in the underlying rate of our operation support, but we still have other investments on top of that in order to drive those underlying improvements. And so that one will have a few that would be relatively flat for this year.
And on the product development expenses again we are growing our product development expenses more slowly than we are growing revenue. So, we’re going to continue to get leverage and discipline on our focus kind of product development efforts. Again, will just be a less of an improvement than what you saw in 2021. And then ADR is a little bit of the challenge to forecasters. ADRs remain higher and stronger, that’s a tailwind to EBITDA if they as the business rebounds more urban, more lower ADR regions and ADRs moderate some that will be continued headwind for our margins.
Naved Khan — Truist Securities — Analyst
Thank you, Brian. Thank you, Dave.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Stephen Ju from Credit Suisse. Stephen, please go ahead.
Stephen Ju — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Okay, thank you so much. So, Brian, I think you rightly called out the longer-term stays as your fastest-growing category and they are going to be at the top there as well. So, thinking about the other side of the equation and I guess the supply side of the equation. So, how are your hosts responding to the rise in this type of demand and are there any sort of supply and demand imbalance considerations we should be thinking about or worrying about because it seems like the pandemic has definitely taught the consumer that they can work and stay anywhere? Thanks.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Hey, Stephen, this is a really, really great question and you are correct that — just let me preface our supply question by saying that this is entire acceleration of this new category of travel, which is that people are less tethered to an office, so they can now live anywhere. Not everyone, but a lot of people.
Additionally, we are really optimistic about cross-border travel rebounding and urban travel rebounding. So all of the original Airbnb use cases from pre-pandemic are going to come back I think in full throttle probably better than before because of pent-up demand. Now, because of that we need to make sure we have enough supply. So, let’s talk about how we get that. Well, the first thing I’d say is that one of the great things about our business is we have a global network. And so what that means is the number one source of hosts on Airbnb are prior guests. In fact, in Q4 33% of posts were prior guests and that number has been going up over the last couple of years.
The other really interesting phenomenon we see is the markets, the fastest supply growth are also the markets have a static demand growth. That’s really interesting and we think the reason why is most of our community are regular everyday people. They are teachers, they are healthcare workers, they are students and really everyday people and as they make money and they got a lot of bookings, we think what’s happening is they are telling their friends and their neighborhood and community and they are also listening and then some other people are expanding the business. So, that’s the first thing is our global network.
Next, we have a full-funnel approach to recruiting hosts. First Stephen, we need to make sure that more people know about hosting. We want the brand of hosting to be at mainstream as the brand of Airbnb, which is a noun and verb used all over the world. So, we did two major host brand campaigns last year, made possible by hosting and a stranger campaign. And both campaigns have driven a lot more traffic and a lot perspective people to Airbnb.
Next, we want to make sure it’s easier to become a host. So, what we did last year is we reduced the number of steps down to 10 easy steps to become a host. One of the things we’ve learned, over the course of starting Airbnb and growing Airbnb is the number of — the less friction, the better the conversion funnel and so as we make them easier more people do it. And we also know that hosting is something that makes people ask questions about. And so what we wanted to do is match our very best perspective host with our very best Superhost so they can ask questions and get their questions answered and this has led to a higher conversion rate of people becoming hosts.
And then finally, we wanted to start addressing the obstacles to people who are hosting that one of the most common obstacles we heard are people were nervous about their home being damaged when they rent it out to guest. And so we launched last year was AirCover top to bottom protection free for every host only in Airbnb and this included $1 million damage protection and liability insurance.
The last thing I’d say though is in addition to our global network, in addition to our supply strategy is this other real important point. This is kind of the Holy Grail, which is that because more people are flexible about where and when they are traveling it means we are further up the funnel. 800 million searches have used I’m Flexible and this means that we can start to point demands where we have supply because we don’t want supply-constrained globally on any night of the year. The challenge is just that too many people go to too few places at the same time, but as the world gets more flexible we can balance supply-demand in addition to our strategy. So, that’s the answer global network, a full host recruitment strategy, and pointing demand to where we have supply.
Stephen Ju — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
We now turn to Bernie McTernan from Needham & Company. Bernie, please go ahead.
Bernie McTernan — Needham & Company — Analyst
Great, thanks for taking the question. Maybe just a follow-up on that with the supply and demand imbalance in the marketplace. Do you see the price appreciation as a problem for demand or an opportunity for the hosts?
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Dave, do you want to take this one?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Well, I think, it’s a bit of both. I mean, if you go back to what we’ve seen for the average daily rate throughout 2021 early in the year, it was almost exclusively driven by mix. So, it’s a rebound of U.S. and European travel. It’s been the rebound in non-urban whole home larger homes. So, the ADR was almost entirely mixed. Through, in the year especially around the peak travel season around the summer, we started seeing some price appreciation in high demand locations grow. I think Tahoe mid-summer and so there was more price appreciation in those areas and it was about equal price appreciation to a mix both in Q3 and that stabilized relatively in Q4.
And so with the amount of demand for travel, the ADRs we’ve not seen it take a significant tamper down on demand for people to travel. I think there’s lot of pent-up demand for people to get out of their homes to travel and live and I think they are just constantly looking for the opportunity to kind of travel.
In terms of the opportunity for hosts to earn more money. I mean, as there could be challenges in inflation driving up costs for individuals they can certainly be empowered to become host as a source of earning additional income. And so we see that Airbnb actually could be a solve for that where Airbnb have had host earn $150 billion as host on Airbnb and they continued to use us as a great way to earn additional income going forward.
Bernie McTernan — Needham & Company — Analyst
Thanks for taking the question.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Of course.
Operator
Our next question comes from Deepak Mathivanan from Wolfe. Deepak, please go ahead.
Deepak Mathivanan — Wolfe — Analyst
Great, thanks for taking the questions. Two quick ones, one for Brian and one for Dave. Brian, you noted that Airbnb would want to become the ultimate host and offer a more personalized service for guests. Can you elaborate on some of those efforts and what type of incremental opportunity do you envision kind of unlock from this in the next few years? And then, Dave, just wanted to ask on the marketing spend, it seems like you noted that you found a new baseline, but as some of this volume scales in the next few years, a lot of it is driven by kind of a macro recovery of the travel spend incrementally. And then also in some of these used cases like long-term stays remaining strong, why shouldn’t we kind of expect additional leverage on marketing? Or is this an effort by you to sort of step up investments, so you can keep marketing spend relatively flat as a percent of revenues and bookings? Thank you.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
All right. Awesome. Thanks, Deepak. Obviously, I’ll take the first question, Dave, and then I’ll let you take the second. So, Airbnb becoming the ultimate host like what I would say let me point you to two things that we are seeing just to give you a sense of where we are going. Let me start by saying Airbnb is really a design-driven company at the very beginning. We have a unique design-driven approach and I think that is a source of much of our innovation and that’s allowed us to create this new category of travel and this allowed us to make over 150 upgrades innovations the last year.
We had some really huge things that we’re going to be launching in the coming months and I’m really excited about a couple of themes that we’re thinking about. Number one, as I said, more and more guests are coming to Airbnb with flexibility, right. So, typically the way it used to work if people would come to Airbnb or an OTA and you’d ask them where you are traveling and most people knew where they were traveling. You’d ask them when you’re traveling, they’d say I know when I am traveling, so maybe they’d say I’m going to Miami this week. The more customer flexible, the more you want to start learning more about why they are traveling and what they are interested in, so you can point demand to where you have supply.
So. the first thing we want to do is provide a more personalized shopping experience. I think that we can go beyond the classic e-commerce paradigm where anonymous customer comes to a website, they type something in the search, they get a listed search result and then they book something. We think that we can provide an even more personalized service and because we have a huge amount of repeat guests and we are a community and we know quite a lot about our guests, I think we can provide a deeply personal service and that will increase conversion rate and really unlock a lot more opportunities for guests. That’s just one example.
One of the example I’m going to give to you is on customer service. One of the things we noticed is when we offer dedicated Superhost support for a Superhost and then AirCover, which is the industry-first protection for hosts, it has massively increased hosts sentiment and we think this is critical and we think we can do quite similar things for guests. We think that we can provide just the ultimate customer service to our guests and be there with them and go above and beyond each step of the way just like a good host.
And as far as does this offer an opportunity for incremental new offerings and services, the answer is absolutely, yes. The more we know about our guests, the better service we provide, the more opportunities we have to promote new offerings to them as well. Dave, do you want to take marketing?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Just to step back for a while, remember that in 2019 before the pandemic, we shifted our marketing strategy to be more brand driven and to be less dependent on search engine marketing. And so we made that shift and it kind of was proven to be the right shift to be made, not only in 2019, but obviously in 2020 and 2021. And what we are currently seeing is still 90% of our traffic remaining to be direct and unpaid. And so we’re continuing to focus more of our spend on brand marketing and less on the search engine marketing. And you are right that the brand marketing then should be more fixed, it’s more of a fixed investment, but what we’re seeing is great success on the brand marketing that we did last year and we’re going to be expanding it to more countries.
And so to the extent that we expand into additional countries, there’ll be some incremental more brand marketing spend in this year. But you are right, once we have penetrated in most of the countries around the world, we could see more leverage because it becomes more of a fixed cost. And as you grow revenue, you can kind of grow revenue out above the marketing. I just — we don’t expect to see that additional leverage in 2022, but we could see it in 2023 and beyond.
Deepak Mathivanan — Wolfe — Analyst
Great, thanks for the elaborate answers. Really appreciate it.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Deepak.
Operator
We now turn to Mario Lu from Barclays. Mario, please go ahead.
Mario Lu — Barclays — Analyst
Great, thanks for taking the question. The first one is on one of your top priorities for ’22 and beyond. You mentioned unlocking the next generation of hosts. It’s been pretty clear that your hosts have been growing in regions that are seeing the largest demand. So, just curious if there is a certain demographic of host that you feel you are currently under indexing and look to unlock? And then, secondly, on service fees or take rate, I understand this is not reported, but of the elevated ADRs due to pent-up demand, does that give you confidence that you could potentially increase the service fee at some point in the future? Thanks.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yeah, Hey, Mario. I can take both and then Dave, you can feel free to elaborate on anything I didn’t get to, but I’ll do both of these. All right. So, let’s talk about unlocking the next generation of hosts. And the question is, is there any area that we are under indexing in. I don’t know if I’d say there is an area we are under indexing in, but I can tell you where I see the biggest opportunity. Airbnb, we started because my roommate and I, we were moving in San Francisco, we couldn’t afford to pay a rent. So, in other words, we weren’t a small business. We weren’t a vacation rental owner. We were just kind of everyday people. We run a property management company.
When we started Airbnb, the real innovation was we created tools to allow everyday people to be able to become host for the very first time and because of that nearly 90% of our host are individuals. They are school teachers, healthcare workers, students. Our hosts have earned over $150 billion since we started and 55% of them are women. So, what we are going to do is continue to focus on individuals. We’re going to continue to support property managers. We’re continuing to invest in them. We also have hotels, but we think probably the biggest growth area is going to be individuals. And the reason why is because things like inflation are providing more pressure on families all over the world and they are going to require economic opportunity to be able to make it through this difficult time. And we saw that — we started Airbnb during the 2008 recession and many people returned to Airbnb because of the economic empowerment it provided.
So, I think that most people don’t realize that they can make an incremental $9,000, $10,000 a year by hosting occasionally. And then there are a number of people that are incredibly successful. I mean, we see people renting unique properties that are making tens of thousands of dollars even hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. So, we think just getting the message out to everyday people that they can become a host, making it easier, and addressing the obstacle systematically is the key opportunity and this is true in geographies all over the world from North America, Europe, Latin America, Africa, and APAC. So, that’s what we’re really seeing.
And then on the service fees and take rate. Let me just say this, there is no question that we have obviously the opportunity to increase take rate on the guest side and the host side. Now, we don’t want to just increase the tax for the service. We want to make sure that we’re going to increase our prices or if we’re going to increase fees that’s going to be because we’re offering services that our guests or our hosts want to pay for. We want to make sure that every single year the value on listing or [Techincal Issues] Airbnb is increased. Right now those opportunities to increase modification efforts are not the most perishable opportunities right now.
And the reason why is we think this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for this huge travel rebound. We have these new use cases. People are living anywhere all over the world, but we also have the return of cross-border travel, the return of urban travel. So, we are totally focused on responding to this travel on a [Technical Issues] market share as possible. Now, the bigger we get and the more scale we get, the more services we could potentially offer to guests and hosts and we’ve seen is there’s a lot of services you can offer to hosts.
I think Ali Baba, Amazon, Etsy, Shopify, and others have proven that there is a huge opportunity in this area. It’s just not the most perishable opportunity right now. So, we’re focused on market share.
Mario Lu — Barclays — Analyst
Great. Thanks, Brian.
Operator
We now turn to Jed Kelly from Oppenheimer. Jed, please go ahead.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Hey, thanks for taking my question. Two if I may, you said your listings were up 20% in non-urban North America, is that coming from primarily individuals or property managers? And then as we think out to 2022 as more people return to urban destinations, how should we think about competition specifically from hotels and more commoditized inventory? Thank you.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Great, thanks, Jed. Why don’t Dave you take the first question growth of individuals versus property managers in non-urban areas?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, broadly what we are seeing is that our growth in new supply has been relatively consistent with the distribution of individual versus professional hosts that we’ve seen typically like the majority of our listings are unique to Airbnb and from our individual host community. And so we are continuing to see the growth in our overall number of listings to be consistent with the relative distribution that we’ve historically seen.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
That was on…
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
We don’t specifically break out the individual versus professional host by geography. I’ll just tell you that broadly we are continuing to see that we focus on the unique needs of the individual host, individual host community. That’s where we are focused on and that’s where we are continuing to see the growth. So, the mix overall has remained relatively stable between individuals and professional hosts during this most recent period.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
And then, Jed why don’t I take the question about competition, hotels and more commodity offering. So, I think the important thing, I mean, this is just one thing to think about. The longer you are away from a home, the more I think you want to be in a home and if you actually look at the growth of Airbnb’s by length of stay every length of stay segment except for one grew from this time in 2019, Q4 2019.
For example, one month stays grew, one week grew, three night stays grew, five nights stays grew. The only stay category that didn’t grow were one night stays. Presumably, these are business travel stays. I don’t think that business travel is going to ever come back the way it was before the pandemic. It doesn’t mean business is not going to come back, I just think it’s going to be different because the way we work is different and I think that’s the bar to get on an airplane to travel for a meeting will just be a little higher than before.
Now, I do think that the travel market is so big that I think there is so much room for both Airbnb and hotels and actually I think many hotels are going to consider Airbnb a very important distribution platform for them. The bigger we get, the more important we actually are to them. I also think the hotels are going to have a really great opportunity with a lot of group travel, conferences like really large like events and off-site. So they’re going to have their area where I think they are going to thrive and I think we’re going to have ours as well, but I don’t actually see like a massive overlap. I do think there are some very distinct use cases that are great for Airbnb and some others that are great for hotels and hotels at this time Airbnb based.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
We now have Brian Nowak from Morgan Stanley. Brian, please go ahead.
Brian Nowak — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Great, thanks for taking my questions. I have two on the bookers, you guys have had incredible bookings growth the last couple of years. I’d be curious to hear about what you know or what you’ve learned about the demographics of your bookers and how it has changed? Age, income, what does the base of your bookers look like now as opposed to pre-pandemic and how does that sort of change your view of the world?
And then, secondly, about all the new bookers that came to the platform in 2020, 2021 what can you tell us about their user behavior from a frequency or booking perspective at this point versus earlier cohorts just so we can sir get an idea of how these users may or may not be different from what you’ve added historically? Thanks.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
All right, thank you. Thank you very much, Brian. And Dave, why don’t you take these?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
So, the first question is bookings growth, what are the demographic of bookers, especially new bookers and new user behavior compared to earlier cohorts?
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
I think broadly the good news is that we are really not seeing a major shift in change overall the demographics have been relatively consistent throughout this rebound and our new cohorts — it’s early, but our new cohorts are still aging consistently with what we’ve seen new bookings cohorts age in the past, the repeat booking rates and things. So, I think, that’s a nice opportunity for us to introduce Airbnb to millions of new guests and it’s great that those guests at least in the early days are having similarly rebooking rates as what we’ve seen historically.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Okay. And maybe Brian I’ll just say one other thing. I think the thing that’s like really quite unique about Airbnb is we are not just a brand for young travelers or old travelers, we’re not just a budget brand or a luxury brand. We are really — we range from budget to luxury, young travelers to retirees, we’re in U.S., we are also in Europe, we’re in every continent in the world and we’re not just urban, we are urban and non-urban. And so, I think the adaptability in our model and the incredible selection that we have really bring kind of the whole world to Airbnb. And so we are seeing and I think I continue to expect that really all demographics are going to continue on Airbnb. It’s a pretty unique brands that can really flex in that way. And so I think it’s one of the great points of our global network.
Brian Nowak — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Thanks, Brian. Thanks, Dave.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. We now turn to Brian Fitzgerald from Wells Fargo. Brian, please go ahead.
Brian Fitzgerald — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Thanks, guys. A couple of questions on length of stay. As you can see — you see the strong growth in longer stage, just wondering if you could walk us through some of the take rate dynamics of that? And when you talked about addressing the key pain points of hosts just wondering if you could share what some of the ongoing points of friction are there in preventing people from hosting on the platform?
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yeah, that’s great. So, Dave why don’t you take the length of stay take rate dynamics and I can talk about key obsticals people have for hosting.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. On the take rate, so the long-term stays, they have moderately lower take rate because the guest needs are a little bit lower and the ADRs is lower, the average daily rates because they are staying for longer because host often offer a discount, but those lower take rates and ADRs were offset by the fact that they are longer than short-term stays and the cost actually support them. So, lower customer support costs and other — and actually having more nights booked, those are benefits and then become a tailwind and we generate similar contribution margins from a long-term stay booking relative to the short-term stay bookings. So, the dynamics are a little bit different on the top, but the bottom line contribution is more similar.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
And as far as addressing the obstacles, Brian, what we’ve seen is we listen to thousands of hosts and we took a very systematic approach to the journey from people learning about Airbnb hosting to listing to going through the entire process. And the first thing we want to make sure is people know the benefits of hosting. Most people don’t realize the economic opportunity that hosting provides. They don’t realize that you can host in 10 easy steps. They don’t realize that the vast majority of people get their first booking within three days.
We want to make sure that if they have any problems they can get help they need. So we’re going to continue to expand the Ask a Superhost program. We have some ideas to reduce the effort to hosting even further and we want to continue to provide more protections like AirCover to get even more people a peace of mind. I think the thing about Airbnb hosting that’s pretty unique compared to other marketplaces is almost any type of person can be a host. Most people listening to this call could be a host. You could be renting your second home. People rent their primary home, people can rent their homes when they are gone. So, I think, there’s something about hosting that can apply to people of all walks of life and that’s where we’re going to be focused on.
Brian Fitzgerald — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Thanks, Dave. Thanks, Brian.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
You’re welcome.
Operator
We now turn to Doug Anmuth from JPMorgan. Doug, please go ahead.
Doug Anmuth — JPMorgan — Analyst
Thanks for taking the questions. I was just hoping you could talk a little bit more about ADRs and just what you’re seeing so far for bookings in ’22? And just curious as to your view of the degree of decline for this year has changed at all? And then, Dave, just on capital allocation, just curious if there’s any changes or anything different to call out? Now, just given obviously a lot more discipline in the business and a very different degree of profitability versus a couple of years ago. Thanks.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yes, obviously, Dave, why don’t you take both of these. ADR in 2022 and capital allocation.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Yes, like I said earlier in the call, the average daily rate early in 2021 was almost exclusively driven by mix, country mix, urban versus non-urban and whole homes, or whole homes and non-urban Europe, U.S. just has a higher daily rate. And then towards the back half of the year, both in Q3 and Q4, we saw some price appreciation in high demand markets in kind of peak periods. And so that is more equally weighted between the two.
And so then what we’ve seen kind of coming and we expect that as urban comes back and we are continuing to see urban accelerate every quarter and some of our lower ADR markets start coming back. And we have seen in places like Latin America now well above the 2019 rates. So, we’d see some moderation in the ADRs. What we’re seeing early in 2022 and included in the letter is we anticipate about a 4% increase still year-over-year. So, Q1 ’22 over Q1 ’21 in ADR. So, we are still seeing strong ADR rates and anticipate that will be the case here early in the year. And what’s tougher to forecast is the rate of return of those lower ADR segments and then how much of the price appreciation comes kind of sticks. But we would anticipate some moderation of ADRs through the back half of the year. We just don’t know exactly how much.
And then on the capital allocation, I do tell you that I sleep better at night now that we have $8 billion of cash in the bank relative to the position we were in prior to COVID or midst of COVID and it enables us to have the flexibility to continue to invest in growth because that’s what we’re focused on is to grow this business and we can continue to use some of that cash in case we wanted to use it for any kind of acquisitions, although acquisition is not our primary growth driver. And one change that we did announce here in the letter this quarter is that we are planning to pay for our RSU tax obligations for employees with cash rather than selling the cover. So, we will be net settling those shares and that’ll be a use of about a little more than $1 billion of cash during the year. But I’m very proud about how they are with our investments. Thank you.
Operator
Thanks. We now turn to Lloyd Walmsley from UBS. Lloyd, please go ahead.
Lloyd Walmsley — UBS — Analyst
Thanks. I had a couple, first just on the host supply, it sounds like you are seeing good traffic gains in regions where you are advertising, but the aggregate listings number is only up something like 7% from the last disclosure despite a pretty good environment. So, just wondering what gives you the confidence that you can continue to grow supply to meet demand on kind of a multi-year basis? And is there — do you have visibility into the backlog in host just going through that process that gives you that confidence that can accelerate?
And then second one on kind of ADRs, the shareholder letter mentions having over 25% more nights booked for the summer than this time in 2019. Can you talk about what that looks like kind of on a gross bookings basis? And as we think about ADRs if you put aside the geographical format mix shift like where do you think like-for-like pricing is moving up for this year as it seems like some folks are pushing price?
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Okay. Yes, thanks very much Lloyd. So, Dave, I think you can take both of them, and I’m happy to round out the answers, the first one is obviously on host supply how we’re feeling about the environment on a multiyear basis in the backlog host, and the second obviously summer demand, what that means pure GBV, ADR.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. As we kind of mentioned earlier, the key is that on the supply side remember that we have 4 million hosts. The vast majority of those are individuals. 90% of those are individual hosts and the individual hosts hosting their own home or offering the second home. And so what we found kind of during the pandemic is people don’t get rid of their own home or their second home just because there is a global pandemic and they are not having hosting. When people are ready to travel there and ready to travel again.
So, actually, we’ve been quite proud of the fact and pleased that our actual supply has remained as stable as it has throughout this pandemic and I think that’s what you are seeing in regions outside of where we are seeing all the rebound. in U.S. and Europe while there could be softness or not as much growth there. That growth would be there again if the demand comes back. And that’s why we are highlighting the growth that we saw in the high-demand areas. We did grow 20% in U.S. non-urban because that’s where we’re seeing greater amount of demand.
Airbnb is amazingly self-healing dynamic with the approach to how we add supply to our environment. So, I think as the market comes back we’ll continue to do it. And then go ahead Brian.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
And maybe I’ll just round out a little bit in his answer. I just wanted to really underline this. We designed Airbnb in the very beginning so that guests attract hosts and hosts attract guests and this is 14 years later and more than 1 billion guests arrivals later, it’s working obviously pretty well. And again, I think one of the — a couple of reasons, number one guest become hosts and so as we get more hosts the percentage of them — as we get more guest a percentage of them become hosts and we’re going to continue to focus on converting as many guests to hosts as possible. This is a really interesting flywheel.
Number two, the way we grow primarily is word of mouth. So, as regular people get more bookings they tend to tell other regular people about it and the hotel gets a lot of bookings, they are not going to tell the next hotel who is the competitor. Most regular people don’t think of themselves that way so word of mouth starts to spread. But the other thing once again, I also want to underline is the Holy Grail of supply is also being able to point demand where you have supply and we are not even close to supply-constrained any night of the year. If you take a global average of every city, all 100,000 cities around the world. And so we want to do as people are more flexible and we are moving top of funnel, we want to continue to point demand to where we have supply.
And all of that is in addition to our very specific efforts to continue to recruit hosts, which we are really focused on. So, I think they’ve nailed it, it’s all about the global network. And Dave why don’t you take the second question about summer demand.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, summer demand at ADRs. I mean, I think we’re just seeing strong demand for travel. People are ready to travel this summer. We have 25% more nights booked for the summer travel season than we did in 2019. They are ready to get out and do that travel. And obviously, we are seeing that ADRs are higher, but as I mentioned earlier in the call both in Q3 and Q4 a portion of that was mix, and about an equal portion was due to price appreciation.
So, that stayed relatively stable. In other words, we didn’t see price appreciation go up higher as a driver in Q4, it was fairly stable. So, that’s kind of what we have currently forecasted for what we shared in our guide here in Q1.
Lloyd Walmsley — UBS — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
We now turn to Andrew Boone from JMP Securities. Andrew, please go ahead.
Andrew Boone — JMP Securities — Analyst
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Two please, first, can you just talk about your progress with hotels on the platform? Brian, I think you mentioned that briefly earlier. And then secondly, going back to marketing, do we start to think about brand marketing as being more connected to the supply side of the equation meaning that there is going to be continued pressure as you guys grow the network more broadly, but rather than focusing on the demand side focusing more on the listing side and thinking about that as it is connected to marketing? Thank you.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yes. Thanks, Andrew. Why don’t we do this. Why don’t I Dave take marketing, I’ll start there because I want to just recap how we are thinking about marketing over the coming years. And then you can take our progress of hotels on the platform. Let me just back up and just talk about how we are thinking about marketing Andrew.
We have a pretty different marketing approach than our competitors because we take a full-funnel approach to marketing and it combines PR with brand marketing and performance marketing and PR is actually probably the most important channel that built the brand of Airbnb, And that is because Airbnb’s got an offering that’s really unique. And so because of that people are deeply passionate about it. They tell one another and Airbnb has become a noun and a verb used all over the world.
We got more than 0.5 million articles on Airbnb just last year alone. So, it’s been a very important part of our marketing strategy, and I think this explains why nearly 90% of our traffic remains direct or unpaid. Now, we take brand marketing we think of it as really investment in educating the world about Airbnb. So, it’s not really about buying customers about educating people what makes Airbnb special. And then we think of performance marketing as really a laser to laser in on balancing supply and demand. Now with regards to brand marketing going forward it’s a great question. I think we’re going to focus on a couple of big areas.
Number one, yes, we think the area that needs a little more investment is the brand of hosting. The brand of Airbnb is a noun and a verb used all over the world and very few people at this point who travel regularly and book travel don’t know of Airbnb, but we don’t think enough people know about the incredible economic benefits to hosting, just the incredible like what it brings to people’s lives to be able to bring the world to their home, but the other thing is we have a lot of really big innovations that we are going to be launching this year. And so we want to actually put some of our brand marketing dollars behind some of the new products innovations that I’m incredibly excited to unveil this year.
And so those are two of the areas that we are going to continue to invest in. Again, we think of marketing as education. Education in what we have that’s unique and different and we’re going to educate the world about hosting and we’re going to educate the world about our new product innovations this year. With that why don’t I hand over to Dave, maybe the only other thing I’d say hotel before we talk about how they’re doing on our platform is again, the core of our community are individual hosts, but the great thing of our platform is property managers and hotels are great leads to fill in the network gap.
We think most people come to Airbnb to book something unique, one of a kind stay from an everyday host, but we always want to make sure we never have any network gaps. We never want somebody to come to Airbnb and we having not found a place to stay. And so we think hotels and property managers continue to be a very important part of our strategy and the more demand we give them, the more they will continue to come on our platform. I don’t know, Dave, if you want to talk about the progress of hotels on our platform.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Well, is that in 2020 and 2021 we did scale back on our investment in those areas. I mean, it’s key to have hotels filling the network gaps, but as cities are starting to return and we’re getting urban coming back. That’s when the time will need to fill those network gaps with hotels. And so what we’ve seen in Q4 is that the nights remained depressed year over two years, and they are slightly down kind of quarter-over-quarter due to Omicron, but our revenue is a little bit stronger relative to that due to a little bit higher ADRs, which we’re seeing in hotels similar to what we’re seeing in other parts of the business. So, we’ll invest in hotels over the long-term. It’s just not our immediate focus.
Andrew Boone — JMP Securities — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
We now turn to Mark Mahaney from Evercore ISI. Mark, please go ahead.
Mark Mahaney — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Okay, thanks. I just wanted to clarify something on marketing. It does sound like you’ve run a few campaigns towards hosts and towards I think you call them shaggy strangers that you were pretty happy about. So, do you want to lean more into marketing when you talked about expenses levering — leveraging or not leveraging in ’22 should we expect sales and marketing to show some deleveraging to kind of lean more into those marketing plans? And then could you also talk a little bit more about ADRs and I forget what the impact of the longer-term stays, what impact that’s had on ADRs? So, forget about urban, forget about the pricing just that impact itself of longer-term stays is that accretive or dilutive to ADRs, what kind of impact does that have? Thank you.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
All right, thanks very much, Mark, for both questions. Dave, I’ll hand it over to you, sorry.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Okay. On the marketing campaign, as I said earlier, we anticipate our marketing expense as a percentage of revenue in 2022 to be relatively consistent with that in 2021. So, I’m not anticipating further deleverage and also not anticipating a lot of incremental leverage. As we’re growing this year, we’ll be expanding the investment to more countries. And as you noted like some of the brand marketing that we’re doing in support of hosts. I think one of the powers remember of our marketing is that we can speak to both sides of the marketplace. So, anytime we market Airbnb we can actually talk to both guests and hosts. And as Brian mentioned earlier, one of our single largest sources of new hosts are our former guests.
On the ADR long-term stays are dilutive on the ADR as the percentage goes up, but it’s kind of offset by some other — the other factors that we talked about in the call today both mix shift and price appreciation is what continues to boy the ADR rates overall.
Mark Mahaney — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Okay. Thank you, Dave. Thank you, Brian.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Mark. Appreciate it.
Mark Mahaney — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Kevin Kopelman from Cowen and Company. Kevin, please go ahead.
Kevin Kopelman — Cowen and Company — Analyst
Thanks a lot. Just had a follow-up on some of the recent booking trends you are seeing. So, looking at the Q1 revenue guide at the midpoint there, it would be 70% higher than in Q1 ’19 and that’s higher than any of the GBV stats you’ve given out so far. So, is that revenue growth all GBV driven or are there other take rate or other components in there as well and if so what are they? Thanks.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Yeah, the GBV is primarily driven by — relative to nights is driven by the increase in ADR. So, our absolute kind of take rate on a percentage GBV is actually remaining fairly stable. So…
Kevin Kopelman — Cowen and Company — Analyst
Perfect, thank you.
Dave Stevenson — Chief Financial Officer
Great, thank you, Kevin.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
Thank you very much, Kevin.
Operator
We’ve come to the end of our Q&A. I’ll now hand back to Brian Chesky for closing remarks.
Brian Chesky — CEO & Chairman of the Board
All right. Well, thanks for joining us today everyone. Just to summarize what we shared today. 2021 was the record year for Airbnb. We hit new highs with gross booking value, revenue, net income and adjusted EBITDA. We made more than 150 upgrade innovations across every aspect of our service, but we’re not stopping there.
In 2022 and beyond the world will continue to change as millions of people choose to live anywhere. In Airbnb we’ll relentlessly innovate to support this new world. We’ve now been a public company for more than a year and I want to end today by thanking our employees who have worked tirelessly to make all of this innovation possible and to our millions of guests and host around the world I want to thank you for trusting us and helping build Airbnb into what it is today. Thank you all, and I’m going to speak to you again soon from another Airbnb somewhere around the world. See you.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]