Kayak (company)
Travel metasearch engine owned and operated by Booking Holdings From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Travel metasearch engine owned and operated by Booking Holdings From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kayak (styled as KAYAK) is a metasearch engine for travel services, including airline flights, hotels, rental cars, and vacation packages.[3] It is owned and operated by Booking Holdings.[4]
Type of site | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Available in | 18 languages |
Founded | January 14, 2004 |
Headquarters | Stamford, Connecticut, U.S. |
Area served | Global |
Founder(s) | Steve Hafner Paul M. English |
Key people | Steve Hafner (CEO) Ko Baryiames (CTO) Amy Wei (CCO) Peer Bueller (CFO) Tore Pein Jensen (CMO) |
Industry | Travel Technology |
Products | Travel agency Metasearch engine |
Revenue | US$292.7 million (2012)[1] |
Parent | Booking Holdings |
Subsidiaries | SWOODOO Checkfelix Mundi Hotels Combined |
URL | www |
Launched | February 7, 2005 (Public)[2] |
Native client(s) on | iOS, Android, watchOS, Amazon Alexa, Facebook Messenger |
Kayak's website and mobile apps are currently available in about 20 languages and 30 countries, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, India, China, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Russia,[5] Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, Finland, the Netherlands, Australia, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, Belgium, Korea, Japan, and Singapore.
Kayak was founded in January 2004 by Steve Hafner and Paul M. English.[6][7] Before Kayak, Steve Hafner, Kayak's current CEO, helped found Orbitz in November 1999 and led its business development, advertising sales, marketing, and product marketing activities.[8]
The company was originally named Travel Search Company, Inc. and the name was changed to Kayak Software Corporation in August 2004.[9]
The website launched in February 2005.[2]
In December 2007, Kayak raised $196 million in financing from a group of investors including General Catalyst, Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners, and Oak Investment Partners. Using that funding, Kayak acquired SideStep, another online travel agency.[10][11]
On March 5, 2010, Kayak sold certain assets related to TravelPost.[12]
In May 2010, Kayak acquired German travel search platform Swoodoo.[13]
In January 2011, Kayak shut down SideStep and redirected SideStep traffic to Kayak.com.[14]
In April 2011, Kayak acquired all of the outstanding shares of JaBo Vertrieb-und Entwicklung GmbH, or JaBo Software, operator Checkfelix, a travel search engine in Austria.[15]
On July 20, 2012, Kayak became a public company via an initial public offering. On its first day of trading, Kayak opened at $26 per share and closed at $33.18 per share.[16]
On May 21, 2013, Booking Holdings, then known as Priceline.com, acquired the company for $2.1 billion.[17]
In September 2013, Kayak announced an office move to the Harbor Point district of Stamford, aided by a $2.5 million loan from the state of Connecticut.[18]
In 2017, the company acquired Mundi, a Brazilian flight metasearch company.[19]
In 2018, Kayak assumed leadership of Hotels Combined, which was acquired by parent company, Booking Holdings.[20]
In 2024, Kayak added fares from Southwest Airlines to its listings.[21]
In 2013, Travel + Leisure included Kayak's app in its list of the Best Apps for Business Travelers[22] as well as its list for the Best Apps for websites and travelers.[23]
Time named Kayak on its list of the 50 Best Websites of 2009.[24]
Mashable included Kayak in first place for the website's list, "10 Budget Airfare Tools Every Traveler Should Know in 2012".[25]
Kayak won the following Webby Awards:
The World Travel Awards presented Kayak with the World's Leading Flight Comparison Website award in 2013 and the World's Leading Travel Search Website award in 2011.[33]
In December 2011, Kayak announced that it would not renew a contract to advertise on the TLC reality television show All-American Muslim. The decision followed a campaign by the Florida Family Association, a one-man fundamentalist organization focused on “defending American values".[34][35] In a statement posted to the Kayak website, Kayak Chief Marketing Officer, Robert Birge, wrote that TLC “was not upfront with us about the nature of the show”.[36]
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