AI helped me find the perfect "remote-work-ready" accommodation during a critical business trip to a dense, unfamiliar city (Tokyo) when standard filters failed. The Challenge: I needed a hotel room that wasn't just "nice," but specifically had: -> A dedicated desk (not a tiny round table). -> Excellent acoustic isolation (for 3 AM Zoom calls). -> Hardwired Ethernet (Wi-Fi was too risky for large file transfers). -> Proximity to a specific train line, not just a "neighborhood." Booking.com and Airbnb filters were useless for "soundproofing" or "ethernet ports." The Solution: I used Perplexity AI (Pro Search) to act as a deep-research concierge. Instead of filtering checkboxes, I prompted: "Find me 4-star hotels in Shibuya/Shinjuku with reviews specifically mentioning 'quiet rooms,' 'soundproofing,' and 'ethernet ports' from 2024-2025 business travelers. Cross-reference with 'fast internet' speed test mentions." What Made It Stand Out: The AI didn't just list hotels; it read the reviews for me. It surfaced a specific business hotel (The Blossom Hibiya) and cited recent TripAdvisor and Google Reviews confirming: "Thick walls, couldn't hear sirens," and "Ethernet port works great for video calls." It saved me 4 hours of manually reading hundreds of reviews to find those specific keywords. I booked it, and it was flawless, exactly as described. The AI bridged the gap between "listed amenities" and "verified reality."
I run one of the largest product comparison platforms online, and one of the clearest examples of AI improving my travel experience came from using an AI-driven accommodation tool that analyzes behavioral patterns rather than just filters. Instead of choosing a hotel by scrolling through endless listings, I used an AI platform that asked about trip intent — quiet workspace, walkability, room layout, noise tolerance, and nearby food options — and then matched those needs to hotels with documented patterns from past guests. What made it stand out was how it interpreted context. I needed a place that was quiet in the evenings, had reliable Wi-Fi, and was close to late-night dining because I work through multiple time zones. Traditional platforms would have returned dozens of generic "business-friendly" hotels. The AI instead surfaced a boutique property with consistently strong late-night noise scores, verified workspace photos, and guest reviews highlighting internet speed and neighborhood convenience. The match was perfect because the system weighted real-world behavior rather than marketing labels. It didn't just filter by amenities — it predicted the experience based on patterns it learned from thousands of stays. AI didn't replace the act of choosing a hotel, but it removed all the friction and surfaced an option that fit exactly how I travel. Albert Richer, Founder, WhatAreTheBest.com
One time AI genuinely surprised me was when I was searching for a short-term place to stay in a new city where I didn't know the neighborhoods at all. I used Airbnb's search and recommendation system, but what stood out was how quickly it adapted once I started interacting with listings. After a few saves, filters, and scrolls, the results shifted noticeably — quieter neighborhoods, walkable areas near cafes, good Wi-Fi, and places clearly set up for longer stays rather than weekend tourism. What really made it feel "right" was how the platform balanced hard constraints with softer preferences. I wasn't just seeing places within budget; I was seeing homes that matched my lifestyle. The descriptions highlighted desk setups, natural light, proximity to transit, and host responsiveness — things I care about but didn't explicitly rank at first. The map view also adjusted intelligently, pulling me away from noisy hotspots toward residential areas I wouldn't have discovered on my own. The result was a place that felt less like temporary accommodation and more like a home I could function in immediately. I didn't need to move or compromise mid-stay, which saved time, money, and stress. What stood out to me was that the AI wasn't trying to upsell me. It was optimizing for fit, not flash. That experience changed how I think about AI in travel — when it's done well, it doesn't feel like automation at all. It feels like someone quietly paying attention.
ChatGPT helped me find a Lisbon apartment that actually fit how I work: quiet street, walkable to Second Home co-working, full kitchen, washer, a real desk, no first-floor unit, morning light, and a flexible cancel policy. I started by asking for neighborhoods that match those rules and got a short list with pros and cons. Then I pasted my dates and budget and asked for 6-8 listings on Booking or Airbnb that met the filters. The useful bit wasn't the links, though - it was the structure. For each option it summarized noise risk, floor/elevator, desk and chair quality, Wi-Fi notes from reviews, sun exposure, walking time to the co-working space, and the exact cancellation cut-off. It also gave me a three-question checklist to send hosts about quiet hours and workspace photos, plus two backup hotels if the apartment fell through. I booked in 10 minutes and never had to "make do" once I landed - calls were clear, laundry was easy, and I could walk to work. From here, the takeaway is to tell the model your non-negotiables, ask for neighborhoods first, and insist on a structured compare with review quotes and a host question list. Once you solve this and the trip feels easy.
I was stuck in Osaka with accommodation either fully booked or wildly overpriced, so I used ChatGPT to sanity-check the local area instead of doom-scrolling booking sites. It surfaced something I would have missed: manga and anime cafes with private booths you can rent by the hour, and in Japan it is common for people to use them as a late-night stop when hotels are tight. What stood out was how hyperlocal the recommendation was, it gave me a practical option that fit the reality on the ground, not a generic "top 10 hotels" list.
I was travelling to Santa Monica for the first time. I wanted to find a good-reviewed Airbnb and one that aligned with my needs (good Wi-fi for my remote work, good reviews, cheap, in a safe location, and easy access), so I gave my prompt to ChatGPT and Gemini, and it worked great. They gave me a list with multiple affordable options, and they had everything that I needed. It was a great trip!
Recently I put an AI system to the test while on the road for work and searching for a temporary place to stay. I simply told it what I was looking for, a place in the right location, at a price I was comfortable with, and with the right amenities, and it came back with some options I never would've stumbled upon on my own. In a matter of minutes the AI had sifted through loads of listings and highlighted the ones that more or less ticked every box on my wish-list What really impressed me was how well it was able to fine-tune the search based on some pretty specific requirements, like getting a place with some decent natural light, or one that was nice and quiet, or ideally close to public transport. And it did something pretty nifty too, it predicted which landlords were most likely to respond quickly, thereby saving me a load of time and what would've otherwise been a whole lot of back and forth by email. Booking was a complete breeze because the AI also kept an eye on the different prices, lease terms and what people had said about the places in reviews, making it easy for me to pick the right one with confidence. It all felt very much like the system had a good understanding of who I was and what I wanted, making the whole process a lot more streamlined and intuitive than just using a traditional search would have been.
I mostly find myself using ChatGPT for idea generation, specifically for narrowing down choices for accommodation by inputting very specific prompts depending on my budget and travel location. For instance, I was able to find a place that's both near the town I'm staying at and the hiking area I'm going to in the morning, which makes my lodging choice more convenient. What made it stand out for me though was how I still had full control over the final decisions. I'm also able to avoid inconsistencies or uncertainties I may likely encounter, resulting in a less stressful planning of my travels. I've considered using other AI travel agents but haven't really pushed through with it since I mostly read a lot of promotional-sounding feedback instead of genuine ones, which are usually the same thing structured in different ways from various users; so I think I'm going to stick with ChatGPT for a while.
Perplexity recently helped me find the ideal hotel when staying in San Francisco because unlike ChatGPT, it pulls from live web search results. I searched for accommodations that are either new or newly renovated and ChatGPT kept pulling data that was five years old. Perplexity helped me find an accommodation that is new, has a pool, parking with camera surveillance, and has a 24/7 gym within a 5-mile radius. With ChatGPT, this would have taken 30 prompts and I'd still have to do research on Google.