• Airbnb is letting staff "live and work from anywhere," CEO Brian Chesky announced on Thursday. 
  • Staff will be able to work flexibly from where they want and won't lose pay, Chesky said in a memo. 
  • From September, workers can also choose from 170 countries to work in for up to 90 days.

Airbnb is going all out to accommodate its staff's desire for more flexible working arrangements. 

"Today, we're announcing that Airbnb employees can live and work anywhere," CEO and founder Brian Chesky said in a Tweet on Thursday, announcing the permanent flexible-working plans.  

Under the benefit, the majority of staff will be given the flexibility to choose to work from where "they're most productive" Chesky explained in an email to staff. This includes the choice of being able to work anywhere within their home country, without a loss of pay. 

From September, they'll also be able to spend up to 90 days abroad — although they will still be required to have a permanent address for tax purposes. They will also be responsible for organizing authorization from respective local governments, per the email. 

Employers are under pressure to give their employees a greater say over where, and how they work. A majority of white-collar employees are reluctant to return to the office full time, following COVID-19 lockdowns.

"Our business wouldn't have recovered as quickly from the pandemic if it hadn't been for millions of people working from Airbnbs," Chesky said. "We also had the most productive two-year period in our company's history—all while working remotely."

A small number of workers in core responsibilities will be required onsite permanently, and have already been informed, the email said. The company still plans to hold in-person events, and most staff should expect to gather in person for up to a week every quarter. 

Location-based pay has been a particular point of tension. Facebook, now Meta, enraged some staffers when Mark Zuckerberg suggested workers' salaries may be adjusted, in some cases reduced, if they moved to a location with a cheaper cost of living.  

While other firms have been reluctant to give staff the freedom to work from anywhere due to complications over tax and payroll, Chesky said he hoped Airbnb can "open-source" a solution so other companies can offer this flexibility as well.

From June, the company will introduce single pay tiers, and increase the pay of staff whose salary was previously set using a lower location-based pay tier, the memo said. 

Airbnb is keen to capitalize on workers' desire for a more nomadic lifestyle

Airbnb, which completed an IPO in 2020, has more than 5,000 staff worldwide. 

Chesky sees clear benefits in embracing flexibility, both for workers and Airbnb's business model. In January, he announced he was living on the platform, staying in a different town or city every few weeks.

The CEO noted in the latest memo that 20% of stays booked on the platform during the second half of 2021 were for stays of longer than a month.

The company is making moves to capitalise on what Chesky has previously termed as a "decentralization of living" that's left a growing number of workers seeking a more flexible and nomadic way of working.

In July it unveiled a tool that enables its four million hosts to show real-time WiFi speeds in property listings

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