Here are the 14 best vacation rental sites.

Renting a house or apartment for vacation? You’ve got plenty of options—maybe too many. Travelers looking a vacation rental can search big online travel agencies, small specialty sites, and everything in-between. The process can be overwhelming. Note: Most of the more well-known vacation rental websites are owned by a handful of large companies, so you can find yourself wasting time searching the same inventory on multiple sites.

Below is a list of the vacation rental sites I’ve found offer the best combination of plentiful inventory, useful filters, informative listings, and fair prices without too many hidden fees. There’s no single best vacation home rental site; each one has pros and cons to suit different types of travelers. For example, some of the top vacation rental websites are better if you’re open to both hotels and rentals, while others are more specialized to suit those who already know they want in a vacation home, rental apartment, or private room in someone else’s space. Some vacation rental sites make it easier than others to browse properties on a map or to contact the owner of a property to ask questions before your stay.

My top 14 vacation rental sites:

Airbnb
Booking.com
Expedia
HometoGo
Hotels.com
Tripadvisor
Tripping
Vrbo
Plum Guide
Sonder
TurnKey
Marriott Homes & Villas
Agoda
Getaway

1. Airbnb

The name of this site is practically synonymous with short-term rentals. Airbnb offers abundant listings in most popular travel destinations, and its site is cleanly designed and easy to use. There’s a prominent map of properties on the main listing page, so you can quickly browse by location—or you can turn off the map feature if you don’t find it useful. The main listings page offers lots of info right off the bat, including the number of bedrooms and bathrooms, traveler rating, price (both per night and for your total stay), guest capacity, key amenities, and type of accommodation—such as “entire apartment” or “private room in house.” You can also scroll through a listing’s photos right on the initial results page.

Once you click on a given listing, there’s more than enough information to help you decide whether to book, including house rules, bed configurations, cancellation policies, amenities, reviews from past guests, and a full price breakdown (which typically includes things like a cleaning fee and Airbnb’s own service fee). You can also contact the property’s host through the platform if you have questions before you book.

Best feature: The site makes it easier to sort through hundreds of properties by identifying Superhosts (“experienced, highly rated hosts who are committed to providing great stays for guests”) and Airbnb Plus listings (“a selection of places to stay verified for quality and design”). Because standards can vary so widely from one vacation rental to another, choosing properties with one or both of these designations can help you feel more confident in your selection.

Check out Airbnb

2. Booking.com

Booking.com lists just about every type of accommodation imaginable, from hotels and B&Bs to vacation rentals and apartments. This is a perk for travelers open to a variety of lodging options, while those who know they want a vacation rental will have to take the extra step of filtering out other search results. (This is easily done via a “Entire Homes and Apartments” button at the top of the results page or searching by property type.)

Property listings offer plenty of information, including amenities, guest reviews, house rules, and an option to contact the host through the site. The site clearly labels whether your booking is nonrefundable or you can cancel without penalty up to a certain date. (In some cases, you’ll pay less if you’re willing to make a nonrefundable booking.)

Keep an eye out for extra fees, which can be significant depending on the property. For example, one property’s listed price was a seemingly affordable $689 for seven nights in the Outer Banks—but when I clicked “book,” the site added a 12.75 percent tax, $63.11 tourism fee, $105 resort fee, $130 cleaning fee, and $260 property service charge, taking my total costs to $1,406—more than double the original quoted price! Note:, none of these extra charges were a Booking.com fee; unlike Airbnb, Booking.com does not charge guests a service fee.

One annoyance: The site sometimes clutters up the search results page with sold-out properties, complete with a “You missed it!” message. These are probably meant to spark a sense of booking urgency, but I find it irritating to see options that aren’t actually available.

Best feature: The sheer breadth of offerings on Booking.com means you’re almost guaranteed to find something suitable, even if it doesn’t end up being a vacation rental.

Check out Booking.com

3. Expedia

Like Booking.com, Expedia offers a variety of accommodation types, but it has a dedicated vacation rental search page so you can skip the filtering step. The site offers a good selection of results, though for certain searches I got some listings that really didn’t seem like vacation rentals (for example, TownePlace Suites by Marriott and Outer Banks Motel).

Expedia isn’t the best vacation rental site if you prefer to use the map view to browse; although a map is available, it doesn’t have the site’s filter options, so you’ll have to set your preferences on the main listing page first and then toggle over to the map.

Once you click on a listing, you’ll find photos, amenities, policies, reviews, and a list of nearby attractions. However, there does not appear to be a way to contact the owner of a given property. And the total price is not visible until you click “reserve,” at which point you’ll see an additional amount listed vaguely as “taxes and fees,” with no detailed breakdown. On many properties, the site notes you can save 10 percent if you log in as an Expedia member.

Best feature: The site has useful filters such as “Business friendly” to help you find properties with Wi-Fi and breakfast, and “Family friendly” for listings that have “in-room conveniences and activities for the kids.”

Check out Expedia

4. HometoGo

The prime advantage of HometoGo is that it’s a meta-search site, which means you can search many of the best vacation rental sites (including most of the others on this list) with one click. Persistent pop-ups and offers to sign you in with Google or Facebook are annoying, but once you’ve cleared them away you can view tons of properties, visible in a clean listing format or on a map. Each listing features photos you can scroll through as well as user rating, type of lodging, and where you can book the property (such as Airbnb, Hotels.com, or Vrbo).

One handy feature: You can toggle the price filter to show you either the nightly rate or the total cost of your stay, and then adjust your price range accordingly. Other filters include accommodation types (including an “instant booking” option), location, user rating, and amenities.

In most cases, when you click on “view deal,” you’ll be taken to the site where the property was originally listed. However, there are occasional properties where you will be sent to a HometoGo listing page to fill out a booking request that will then be fulfilled through one of the site’s partners.

I occasionally found when I clicked over to a deal (particularly on Airbnb), I was not taken directly to the property I was interested in but rather to a list of other rentals at my destination because the property I was interested in wasn’t available anymore. I also sometimes discovered that the price on HometoGo didn’t match what was advertised on the original listing site.

Best feature: Despite occasional pricing glitches, this site is the closest thing the vacation rental industry has to a one-stop shop, as it lists inventory from hundreds of other short-term rental websites.

Check out HometoGo

5. Hotels.com

Like Booking.com, Hotels.com lists a wide array of accommodation options, so travelers who want a vacation rental have to use the “Accommodation Type” filter on the search results page to weed out hotels, hostels, and other options. I appreciated the honesty of the note at the top of the page: “How much we get paid influences your sort order.” That said, you can sort your results by star rating, distance from a given landmark, guest rating, and price, and refine the list with a variety of other filters.

There is a map view available, though I didn’t find it very useful; it shows properties that don’t meet your criteria by default, and by the time you screen those out, you’re often left with just a few options (even if the site is showing hundreds of listings on the main results page).

The list view of results is better, displaying both the nightly rate and the total price for your stay, as well as guest rating and location information. You do need to weed through occasional “fully booked!” listings, and Hotels.com doesn’t offer the ability to scroll through a property’s photos directly from the results page the way many other vacation rental sites do.

Once you click on an individual listing, you can see amenities, policies, photos, guest reviews, and a list of attractions within walking distance. One drawback: There’s no way to contact the owner or property manager directly. While there is a phone number given for “more info” about the listing, this takes you to a general Hotels.com corporate phone number. Taxes and fees aren’t visible until you click the “Let’s book” button, and there’s no detailed breakdown of where your money is going.

Best feature: Many vacation rental bookings are eligible for Hotels.com Rewards, so you can count your stay toward a future free night at either a hotel or a rental.

Check out Hotels.com

6. Tripadvisor

Although it’s best known for hotel reviews, Tripadvisor also provides vacation rentals thanks to its acquisitions of FlipKey and HolidayLettings. (The sites share inventory, so searching Tripadvisor will turn up properties from the other two sites.) There are plenty of listings, which you can filter by price, number of bedrooms/bathrooms, distance from a landmark, and many other factors. The site also lets you change the order of your results based on nine different criteria, including online booking, traveler rating, and number of bedrooms.

The site has a mix of properties, some of which can be paid for online and others that require direct arrangements with the owner. (The former is generally preferable, as paying with a credit card is the safest way to go—and you’ll be backed by Tripadvisor’s Payment Protection guarantee.)

I found that photo quality could vary widely from one listing to another on Tripadvisor, whereas some other vacation rental sites have more consistent (and glossy) images. Otherwise, Tripadvisor’s listings are generally informative, with traveler reviews, house rules, and an owner profile. Prices and fees are spelled out in detail. However, cancellation policies are not as clearly stated on this site as on some others. There is an option to send a message to the owner through the site.

Best feature: The price on the listing results page is the final price you’ll pay, including taxes and fees—rather than the base rate, which is what most vacation rental sites list. Tripadvisor also lists both the nightly rate and the total cost.

Check out Tripadvisor

7. Tripping

Acquired by HometoGo in 2019, Tripping is another meta-search site for vacation rentals that turns up listings from hundreds of different sites, including many on this list. When I searched HometoGo and Tripping side by side, I found a lot of overlapping properties, but the results did not appear to be completely identical. (For example, a Rome search turned up 8,800+ properties on HometoGo vs. more than 14,000 properties on Tripping.) So even though the two sites are owned by the same company and offer virtually identical layouts and filters, it may be worth your time to check both.

Tripping offers a prominent map view alongside the listings on its main results page. Like HometoGo, Tripping shows hotels and hostels in addition to apartments, homes, and other types of properties; use the “Accommodation types” filter to trim your results. You can toggle between “per night” and “per stay” options for pricing, specify a minimum number of bedrooms, and filter for amenities such as internet, air-conditioning, and washer. And you can scroll through listing photos right from the results page.

Clicking on “view deal” takes you to an external site for information and booking. As with HometoGo, there were occasional snafus in this process; prices didn’t match, properties weren’t available, or (in one case) I ended up on an error page. In most cases, though, the listings were as advertised.

Best feature: Both Tripping and HometoGo have a new “flexible dates” feature that lets you search a given length of stay (such as a week or a long weekend) over a selected time period (such as October through December) to see when the best deals are available.

Check out Tripping

8. Vrbo

Acquired by Expedia Group in 2015 and then merged with its sister site HomeAway in 2019, Vrbo (originally called VRBO, which stood for “vacation rentals by owner”) offers the strongest features of both sites. You can browse by property type, from condos to cabins, through over two million vacation rentals. If you have an idea of the type of trip you’d like to take but aren’t attached to a destination, you can check out a curated lists of properties by vacation type and nearby activities. The search results are displayed alongside an interactive map to show how far your rental is from your target destination. While this is a great visual, if you move the map even slightly the site will recalibrate your search to show you new properties, which can be a bit of a nuisance.

The search results display the top amenities at a glance for each property, along with both the nightly price and total price of the stay for your selected dates. Click on a result to see an in-depth and easily navigable description of policies and amenities, along with star ratings and traveler reviews.

Best feature: Vrbo highlights Premier Partners that offer great guest service.

Check out Vrbo

9. Plum Guide

Aimed at taking the hit-or-miss guesswork out of vacation home rentals, Plum Guide has dedicated itself to what it refers to as “the science behind the perfect stay.” This site is extremely selective in its properties, with only 3 percent of homes at any given destination passing its 150-criteria Plum Test conducted by their seasoned Home Critics.

With a real person team of Plum Experts available seven days a week to assist with any questions and an easy to navigate, highly visual website, the Plum Guide’s people-centric approach to booking will make your vacation rental experience easy and pleasant.

Best Feature: Plum Guide’s best feature is its selective criteria; you can be sure you’re getting what you see online. While this can be a blessing if you want the peace of mind that comes with knowing your accommodation has been given a professional seal of approval, it may restrict your options if your travel dates don’t allow for flexibility.

Check out Plum Guide

10. Sonder

Focused on eliminating unnecessary steps in the rental process, Sonder is a streamlined way to book your next vacation rental. Guests can check in, make requests, and ask for recommendations all through their phones. The site’s layout is really easy to navigate, with clearly marked amenities for each property and information on parking, accessibility, and house rules readily available.

Beyond its booking process, Sonder places an emphasis on social responsibility. This past year, they partnered with Off-Their-Plate, an organization working with chefs and restaurants to get meals to frontline healthcare workers, to donate a minimum of 1,000 meals.

Best Feature: Sonder offers a flexible cancellation policy: Select “Flex Rate” when booking for the option to cancel your stay up to three days before check-in for a full refund.

Check out Sonder

11. TurnKey

As a five time winner of the Gold Magellan Award, TurnKey is no stranger to the world of vacation rentals. Browse the site by popular destinations or scroll through convenient listings of properties by state. You can centralize your stay through their Guest Portal, which guests can access while booking and during their stay.

Properties are protected by digital locks, with each customer receiving a custom key code at the time of booking, eliminating the need to coordinate key exchanges and reducing in-person contact.

If you do find yourself needing some one-on-one assistance, TurnKey offers 24/7 live guest support. Each rental features complimentary wi-fi and fully equipped kitchens, making these properties a great option for families or travelers who want a break from eating out. Available accommodations are currently limited to the United States.

Best Feature: You deal with a local TurnKey team rather than individual homeowners, guaranteeing a more consistent quality of service across stays.

Check out TurnKey

12. Marriott Homes & Villas

If you want the quality assurance of a big hotel brand without the big hotel feel, then Marriott Homes & Villas may be the right site for you. All accommodations come with 24/7 guest support, kitchen essentials, in-unit washer, bathroom amenities such as shampoo and soap, wi-fi, linens and towels, and a television.

The user interface mirrors that on Marriott’s hotel site. The search function allows you to filter by destination, with travel dates being optional criteria to narrow the search. This is great for those early in their trip planning process or travelers who like to let deals dictate their itinerary. No destination in mind? You can click the “near me” option to see what weekend getaways are available right down the road. Properties on this site typically have upward of 30 photos in their galleries so you’ll be able to see exactly what you’re booking.

Best Feature: Marriott Homes & Villas is a member of the Marriott Bonvoy rewards program. You can earn points when you book or redeem existing points on a vacation rental.

Check out Marriott Homes & Villas

13. Agoda

Agoda allows you to book both hotels and vacation rentals through its online services. With over two million hotels and rentals available, at first glance booking through Agoda can seem overwhelming. (My cursory search for an August week in Kuala Lumpur returned just shy of 3,700 results.)

Luckily, Agoda allows you to refine your search with highly specific criteria. Travelers can filter by destination, trip dates, and number of guests, plus options such as:

-Trip budget

-Number of stars

-Payment options

-Guest rating (overall and by category)

-Specific amenities

-Property type

-Proximity to local attractions

This is great for whittling down your options as well as sparking some inspiration on how to fill your days at your destination.

Best Feature: Agoda will match any competing online price for their properties and refund the difference. Once you know where you want to stay, do your comparison research to make sure you’re getting the best deal.

Check out Agoda

14. Getaway

If a break from your hectic day-to-day life is calling your name, there’s no better option than Getaway; the company makes it their mission to give people “time, space, and permission to be off.” Their 14 Outpost locations—located primarily along the East Coast, with a few options along the Gulf of Mexico and two on the West Coast—are comprised of minimalist cabins ranging from 140 to 200 square feet that can accommodate two to four guests. The mini-kitchens at these properties provide only the bare necessities, but you can supplement your supply by opting for a $30 Sustenance Box, which includes nonperishable meal and snack options. Other camping essentials, such as insect wipes and log bundles, are also available for purchase.

Each cabin has a firepit, grill grate, and picnic table. The neighbors are close enough to be seen but far enough away that everyone has their own outdoor space to enjoy. Check in starts at 3 pm with a personalized entry code sent to your phone, so it’s possible you may not see another soul your entire trip. The trade-off for some time in the great outdoors is cell phone service that may be spotty or unavailable. There is a landline, however, for emergencies and contacting the Getaway team. There’s also no Wi-Fi (and “never will be” according to the FAQ) so make sure to download those Spotify playlists pre-trip.

Best Feature: If you’re looking for an off-the-grid escape but aren’t truly ready to pitch a tent in the middle of the wilderness, this is the right rental experience for you.

Check out Getaway

Twist’s Take: These fourteen vacation rental sites booking sites will help you find and save money on the accommodation you’re looking for!