Airbnb is undergoing a major transformation in how it handles customer support, gradually replacing human roles with AI-powered agents. What was once a system heavily reliant on human representatives assisting guests and hosts is now increasingly driven by automation.
The company has confirmed that AI tools are no longer in the testing phase — they are actively managing a significant share of real customer interactions. Leadership believes these systems are not only more cost-efficient but also capable of delivering improved service quality.
During its fourth-quarter earnings call, Airbnb disclosed that its custom-built AI agent is currently handling approximately 33 percent of customer service requests across North America.
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky told investors:
“We think this is going to be massive because not only does this reduce the cost base of Airbnb customer service, but the quality of service is going to be a huge step change,” Chesky said.
The automation effort is not limited to North America. Airbnb expects that within a year, more than 30 per cent of all support tickets globally will be handled by AI voice and chat tools. The rollout will span every language in which the company currently employs human customer service agents.
This signals a structural shift in how the platform approaches support operations worldwide.
While Chesky did not argue that machines outperform humans in every scenario, he emphasized that routine, repetitive issues benefit from speed and consistency.
Common support requests — including booking modifications, refunds, cancellations, and dispute resolution — require fast processing and standardized decision-making. AI agents:
Do not experience fatigue or seasonal overload
Operate continuously without shift rotations
Instantly manage multilingual conversations
Scale efficiently during peak travel periods
From a cost perspective, customer support is one of the most expensive operational areas in online marketplaces. Automating even a portion of these interactions can significantly reduce overhead.
Airbnb has not explicitly outlined workforce reduction plans. However, by highlighting reduced costs and improved efficiency, the company implicitly acknowledges that traditional headcount growth may no longer be necessary to scale support operations.
With one-third of interactions already automated, observers are questioning how much human involvement will remain as AI capabilities mature further.
Customer support automation is only one component of Airbnb’s broader AI roadmap.
The company recently appointed Ahmad Al-Dahle, formerly a senior AI leader at Meta, to accelerate its AI-driven transformation.
Understands guest preferences
Assists hosts in optimizing listings
Streamlines internal company operations
Enhances trip planning through predictive recommendations
Importantly, Chesky has also argued that standalone AI chatbots cannot easily replicate Airbnb’s integrated ecosystem — which includes verified identities, direct guest-host communication, and hundreds of millions of reviews.
Airbnb reported $2.78 billion in fourth-quarter revenue, surpassing market expectations. The company also projects low double-digit growth this year.
This financial stability provides flexibility to:
Invest heavily in AI infrastructure
Experiment with customer-facing automation
Absorb potential short-term risks tied to technology adoption
Unlike smaller competitors, Airbnb can deploy AI at scale without jeopardizing operational stability.
Airbnb’s move reflects a broader trend across the tech and travel industries. Companies are increasingly leveraging generative AI and large language models to handle:
Call center interactions
Chat-based customer queries
Booking assistance
Refund and dispute workflows
AI-driven automation is rapidly becoming central to cost optimization strategies across digital platforms.
As AI voice tools improve in realism and contextual understanding, the boundary between human and machine interactions is becoming less visible to end users.
Airbnb’s decision to replace a significant portion of customer support roles with AI agents marks a pivotal shift in platform economics. With 33 percent of North American support conversations already automated and plans to exceed 30 per cent globally within a year, the company is betting that machines can deliver faster, cheaper, and in many cases, better service.
Backed by strong quarterly revenue of $2.78 billion and strategic AI leadership hires, Airbnb appears confident in its direction. However, the broader implications remain complex — especially regarding employment and the future role of human agents.
As AI becomes central to Airbnb’s operational model, the company is not merely upgrading tools — it is redefining how digital marketplaces function at scale.