Could your next trip be planned by a virtual travel agent? Booking.com announces new AI Trip Planner

Leading online travel agency Booking.com has ventured into the world of AI with a new ChatGPT-powered trip planner.

One of the world’s leading online travel platforms, Booking.com, is hoping to make your next trip easier with the help of AI.

Announced today (27 June), the booking site’s new AI Trip Planner aims to help you home in on destinations and accommodation in a conversational way.

“Much like how you would begin to talk about planning a trip with your partner or friends,” says Rob Francis, CTO of Booking.com.

Ultimately, it could provide the same services and benefits of a human travel agentBooking.com’s CEO Glenn Fogel told Euronews Travel at ETC’s Destinations Europe Summit.

Powered partly by OpenAI’s ChatGPTthe tool will launch in beta mode to a selection of US travelers on the Booking.com app on 28 June.

Will Booking.com’s AI Trip Planner make life easier for travelers?

Booking.com says the AI ​​Trip Planner can be used to get inspiration, plan your trips and even create daily itineraries.

You’ll be able to chat with him “in a very natural, human way,” says Rob. Once you’ve explained what you’re looking for in broad or specific terms – be it a romantic beach hotel or an air-conditioned apartment close to your favorite restaurant – it will refine your search, finding the best stay for your needs.

The tool uses ChatGPT, a popular chatbot developed by OpenAI. Users ask it questions and it uses masses and masses of data to give a unique, highly personalized response. While it does not “think” like a human, it’s the closest thing that’s been developed yet.

Since the results are integrated into Booking.com, you’ll also be able to see prices and book your stay with a simple tap of a button.

Could AI trip-planning develop further in the future?

“Wouldn’t it be wonderful if [travel] was all seamless and frictionless?” says Glenn.

In the future, he envisions AI will not only help travelers “instantly fix” their bookings in the event of changes and cancellations, but it will “see the problem before the traveler sees the problem… and suggest how to fix it.”

By combining travel, accommodation and other bookings under one payment, bots could solve multiple problems at once. For example, if a flight is delayed, the airport pickup will automatically be amended and the hotel will be notified, without the traveler having to do anything.

“That’s the futures,” says Glenn.