HomeAway expands in China, via TuJia

Everyone loves a good expansion tale, and this one’s a beaut.

In May, Austin-based vacation rental service HomeAway bought a minority stake in TuJia, China’s pioneering, year-old vacation rental service provider.

Joining in the financing were Ctrip, China’s biggest OTA, and venture capital firms Lightspeed China Partners and CDH Investments.

This month we began to see the fruits of that series A investment.

Nearly 2,000 international listings, a subset of HomeAway’s claimed 720,000-home inventory, have been translated to Mandarin and posted on TuJia. The listings were selected for translation because they had the best chances of appeal to middle class and wealthy Chinese travelers.

TuJuia used to only list Chinese rentals. Its staff are doing the translations.

 

Tujia homeaway china vacation rentals tnooz travel

Additionally, HomeAway entered into an agreement last week with Wego, a Singapore-based startup that has become the top travel metasearch site in the Asia Pacific and Middle East. Wego is now listing 400,000 rentals from HomeAway, FlipKey, Stayz, Travelmob, and Marketing Villas, covering 15,000 destinations globally.

The two deals heighten awareness of vacation rentals in Asia. A couple of other interesting stats:

  • 39 million Chinese traveled overseas in the first half of 2012 [Reuters]
  • APAC is forecasted to overtake North America and Europe as the largest travel market in 2013 [PhoCusWright]

Related posts:

  1. HomeAway expands into airline tickets and car rentals from Priceline
  2. HomeAway introducing preferential vacation rental listings and Facebook integration
  3. Super Bowl-advertising HomeAway goes downfield for BedandBreakfast.com acquisition
Sean O'Neill About Sean O'Neill

Sean O’Neill is a UK-based reporter for Tnooz.

Since university, he's been a full-time journalist for US consumer magazines and websites, and since 2007 he has covered B2C travel news full-time.

He lives in London and is travel tech columnist for BBC Travel. He used to work in New York City as the online senior editor for Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel.

In the past, O'Neill held editor, writer, and reporter positions at Kiplinger’s Personal Finance and Foreign Policy magazines in Washington, DC. Please visit his personal site and follow him on Twitter or Google+ .

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