TOURISM MANAGEMENT

Antecedents and consequences of home-sharing stays: Evidence from a nationwide household tourism survey

Yang, Yang; Tan, Karen Pei-Sze; Li, Xiang (Robert)

Abstract

This study aims to understand the demand for home-sharing lodging and whether this accommodation choice influences guest experiences, in terms of overall trip satisfaction and perceived value. Using a dataset from a large-scale nationwide household tourism survey, we adopted a two-step empirical analysis to investigate the antecedents and consequences of home-sharing stays. In the first step, results from logic models highlight various factors explaining the drivers behind choosing home-sharing lodging versus hotel lodging, such as tourists’ tripographics, prior travel experiences, tech savviness, sociodemographics, destination home-sharing supply, and crime rate. In the second step, we employed propensity score matching to compare trip satisfaction and perceived value between home-sharing users and hotel users who were matched based on a similar propensity to choose home-sharing. Results suggest that while home-sharing users perceive a higher value for the trip, no significant difference exists between the two groups’ trip satisfaction. Lastly, practical implications are provided.

Keywords

Home-sharing; Lodging demand; Household tourism survey; Trip satisfaction; Propensity score matching

Research topic

Tourist Experience, Digital Platform and Pricing

Research method

Econometrics

Geographic area

US

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Additional links for this paper

ResearchGate

Publisher Website

Web of Science

HOW TO CITE

Yang, Y., Tan, K. P. S., & Li, X. R. (2019). Antecedents and consequences of home-sharing stays: Evidence from a nationwide household tourism survey. Tourism Management, 70, 15-28.

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