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As millions of empty houses rot in Japan, Airbnb wants to turn them into tourist lodgings

  • Airbnb plans to partner with businesses and local governments to encourage homeowners to invest in renovations
  • Some villages have turned into ghost towns of houses covered in overgrowth as residents leave for major urban hubs

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Japan has some 8.49 million unoccupied homes, according to a government survey in 2018. Photo: Reuters
Airbnb is looking to capitalise on a growing swathe of empty houses in Japan, hoping to convince owners to remodel the vacant homes into tourist attractions.
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“It can be a good source of income after people retire as our lifetime gets longer. If the owners of idle assets refurbish them and convert them into lodgings, that would be a solution,” Airbnb’s head of Japan, Yasuyuki Tanabe, told Nikkei.

Airbnb hopes to partner with businesses and local governments to encourage homeowners to invest in renovations, Tanabe told Nikkei.

“The number of akiya is increasing and expected to increase further. Many of them are too good to be abandoned. There are also safety risks if they are left unkept,” Tanabe added.

Japan has some 8.49 million akiya, or unoccupied homes, according to the government’s Housing and Land Survey in 2018. The survey is conducted every five years.
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Many of these homes have been abandoned as Japan’s population shrinks and ages, and are typically spread out across rural areas.

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