Skyscanner

Online travel agency and metasearch engine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Skyscanner Ltd. is a British search aggregator and travel agency based in Edinburgh, Scotland and operating since 2002.

Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryTravel
Founded2002; 24 years ago (2002)
Founders
  • Gareth Williams
  • Barry Smith
  • Bonamy Grimes
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Skyscanner Ltd.
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryTravel
Founded2002; 24 years ago (2002)
Founders
  • Gareth Williams
  • Barry Smith
  • Bonamy Grimes
Headquarters
Edinburgh, Scotland
,
United Kingdom
Key people
  • Bryan Batista (CEO)
Revenue£261 million (2016)[1]
Number of employees
1,500+ (2026)[2]
ParentTrip.com Group
Websiteskyscanner.net
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History

The company was formed by three information technology professionals.[3] The Edinburgh office was opened in 2004.[4]

In 2009, the year after SEP invested in the business, Skyscanner reported its first profit.[5]

In 2011, Skyscanner acquired Zoombu.[6] Skyscanner opened an office in Singapore in September 2011, which is headquarters for its Asia-Pacific operations.[7] In 2012, a Beijing office was added, as Skyscanner began a partnership with Baidu, China's largest search engine.[8]

By 2013, the company employed over 180 people.[9] In February 2013, Skyscanner announced plans to open a United States base in Miami.[9] In October 2013, Sequoia Capital purchased an interest in Skyscanner that valued the company at $800 million.[10] In June 2014, Skyscanner acquired Youbibi, a travel search engine company based in Shenzhen, China.[11]

By February 2015, the company employed 600 people, double the employment of 18 months earlier.[12]

In January 2016, the company raised $192 million based on a $1.6 billion valuation for the company.[13]

In November 2016, a Chinese company Trip.com Group (formerly Ctrip) bought Skyscanner for $1.75 billion.[14] Following the sale to Ctrip, Skyscanner's largest shareholder, SEP, completed its exit from the business.[15]

In 2017, Ctrip bought the Trip.com domain and launched Trip.com. The original platform became a subsidiary of Skyscanner.[16]

In 2020, after the COVID-19 pandemic, the company announced that it would lay off 300 employees (20% of its staff). It was likely to close two offices in Budapest, Hungary and Sofia, Bulgaria.[17]

In May 2025, the company announced the appointment of Bryan Batista, its chief operations officer, as its new chief executive replacing John Mangelaars.[18] Batista took up the role from 1 June 2025.[18]

See also

References

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