Africa’s fastest-growing destinations on Airbnb
Monday, May 07, 2018
Tourists take pictures in Cape Town, South Africa. Net photo.

Cape Town has long been Airbnb’s most popular African destination, but that lead is slipping as tourists make bolder moves to undiscovered spots on the continent.

South Africa’s "Mother City” remains the top destination for Airbnb’s more than 100,000 listings in Africa and the third most popular city in the southern hemisphere after Sydney and Melbourne.

After an analysis at the end of the 2017/2018 summer season in the southern hemisphere, Airbnb noticed new African cities and countries coming on board.

The Egyptian government’s campaign to revive its struggling tourism industry seems to be paying off. Since 2011, Egypt’s political upheavals and sporadic terror attacks have scared off tourists.

In the summer of 2017/2018, however, the country’s coastlines are making a comeback. The resort towns of Hurghada and El Gouna saw a 220% and 215% growth in listings.

In West Africa, Lagos and Accra are also beginning to increase their Airbnb marketshare.

In the last five years of Airbnb’s presence on the continent, Nigeria lagged behind South Africa, Morocco, Kenya and Tanzania, with about 730,000 active listings according to previous reports, while Ghana was not mentioned in that report on Airbnb’s success in Africa.

Today, metropolitan Accra has 708 active rentals, according to AirDNA, an Airbnb research company.

outh Africa still enjoys the lion’s share of Airbnb arrivals on the continent, mostly thanks to Cape Town’s 350,000 guest arrivals each year. That’s nearly six times more than its closest local competitor Johannesburg, which saw 60,000 guest arrivals.

According to data from AirDNA, Airbnb’s growth in the city has continued to threaten Cape Town’s hotel industry.

Morocco is the second most popular African country on Airbnb, with 22,000 listings and about 300,000 guests last year. Morocco’s efforts to impose a tax on Airbnb may dissuade the home-sharing platform from investing the way Airbnb has in Cape Town and its surrounding winelands and tourist attractions.

As far as North Africa is concerned, Morocco’s perceived stagnation could leave space for further growth from more investment-hungry Egypt.

Still, even at home Cape Town is beginning to see competition from unexpected corners. One of the biggest surprises was Bloemfontein, South Africa’s usually sleepy judicial capital.

The city has tripled the number of guest arrivals over the last summer period, compared to the previous year. Another unexpected competitor was Grahamstown, a small university town known for its annual art festival, growing by 155%. South Africa’s capital Pretoria also saw a 177% increase in demand.

Quartz