Airbnb Inc.

03/23/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/23/2026 20:05

America Off-the-Map: The Rural Destinations You Haven’t Heard Of Yet

As travelers seek alternatives to tourist hotspots, Airbnb is unveiling its first-ever America Off-the-Map list,a curated collection of rural US destinations ripe for discovery. According to a recent Focaldata survey commissioned by Airbnb, 86% of travelers and 94% of Gen Z are interested in rural getaways.1 And in 2025, approximately 64% of all Airbnb guests in the US came from within 300 miles of the destination, showing strong demand for trips close to home.2

Short-term rentals play a key role in helping disperse travel to these communities, offering flexible accommodations where traditional hotels are limited and spreading the benefits of tourism to new areas. Across the country, 63% of US Census tracts are home to active Airbnb listings but no hotels.3 By making it easier to discover unique stays, Airbnb is helping guests travel to different places and directing travel dollars to communities that have historically been off the traditional tourism map.

From coastal fishing villages to Cajun bayou towns and alpine mountain escapes, America Off-the-Map invites travelers to discover something new and helps support local economies and communities across the country. See the full list here.

Expanding Economic Opportunity for Rural Americans Through Tourism

In much of rural America, short-term rentals aren't just an alternative - they're the primary source of visitor accommodation. This is especially true in states like Nevada, where vast stretches of frontier (71%) are often accessible only because a host decided to open their home, welcoming new opportunities for visitors and locals alike.

  • In 2025, Airbnb hosts collectively earned over $9.9B in areas with no hotels - nearly 40% of all US host earnings - bringing tourism dollars to communities that traditional travel often overlooks.4
  • Once they arrive, the impact spreads: 95% of travelers report they're likely to shop and dine locally, putting money directly into family-owned businesses, local farms, and independent attractions that rarely see tourist dollars.
  • In 2024 alone, the typical guest said they spent over $775 per trip at local businesses, creating an immediate and tangible ripple effect in small communities.

"Every guest that comes here eats locally, they shop in the grocery store, or they stop at the brewery. We focus on making sure people that come here get to experience the culture of Louisiana, and the Cajun joie de vivre" said Larry, Airbnb host in Arnaudville, Louisiana.

And we've made it easy for hosts to get started and succeed on Airbnb - from an intuitive Airbnb Setup process to the Co-Host Network, and features like the Listings tab, AI-powered photo tours, and our redesigned messages tab, we've worked to help hosts easily manage their listings.

"Short-term rentals have fundamentally changed who gets to benefit from tourism," said Jordi Torres, Airbnb Managing Director, Americas. "When travelers discover a unique Airbnb listing in a town they've never heard of, more than half say they're inspired to visit for the first time. We want to help spread tourism opportunities to new areas, to lessen the burden on crowded hot spots and give these communities the chance to benefit from this growing trend."

Introducing Airbnb's Full America-Off-the-Map List

Airbnb's America-Off-the-Map list highlights the under-the-radar gems of rural America.

Here are our 20 America Off-The-Map destinations for 2026:

Locations:

  • Sekiu, Washington
  • Matador, Texas
  • Pine Creek Gorge, Pennsylvania
  • Alexandria, New Hampshire
  • Sodus Point, New York
  • Stanley, Virginia
  • Naalehu, Hawaii
  • Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan
  • Wilmington, Illinois
  • Arnaudville, Louisiana
  • Fairview, Utah
  • Snowflake, Arizona
  • Pinos Altos, New Mexico
  • Cedar Key, Florida
  • Dubois, Wyoming
  • Goldfield, Nevada
  • Haines, Alaska
  • Fort Peck Lake, Montana
  • Coarsegold, California
  • Monte Vista, Colorado

Alexandria, New Hampshire

Newfound Lake, four miles from Alexandria, is fed by eight freshwater springs, reaches 183 feet deep, and is consistently ranked among the cleanest lakes in the United States, a superlative the people who've been coming here quietly for decades already know. Mount Cardigan rises to the east, its bare granite summit offering 360-degree views that stretch to the White Mountains on a clear day, and Sculptured Rocks Natural Area follows a glacially carved bedrock gorge down to a waterhole locals will tell you is the best natural waterslide in New England. Alexandria itself is barely a village: a town common, a general store, and the kind of stillness that's getting harder to find.

Stay here - (Photo credit: Chris & Pam Daniele) & here

Arnaudville, Louisiana

Arnaudville doesn't advertise itself. It doesn't have to. One of Louisiana's oldest settlements, this small bayou town on the Teche operates entirely on its own cultural frequency. About 40% of residents speak Cajun French at home, and that living language animates everything from the traditional music at Bayou Teche Brewery - where live Cajun and Zydeco sets are a weekend institution - to the French-language programming at NUNU Arts and Culture Collective, a community arts space that doubles as a gathering place for local artisans and storytellers. Swamp tours on Bayou Teche reveal an ecosystem teeming with herons, alligators, and Spanish moss.

Stay here

Coarsegold, California

Gold was discovered in Coarsegold in 1849, and the town has been pleasantly unhurried about everything since. Sitting in the Sierra Nevada foothills along the historic mining corridor, it offers antique stores, working cattle ranches, and art studios alongside something the gateway towns closer to Yosemite's south entrance increasingly can't: space. The park itself is about 20 miles up the road, close enough for a day trip and far enough to avoid the parking queues and dawn check-ins that define the visitor experience further up Highway 41.

Stay here

Monte Vista, Colorado

Each March, more than 20,000 sandhill cranes descend on the San Luis Valley during their northward migration, and Monte Vista has been watching them pass for longer than anyone can remember. The Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge sits just south of town, flanked by the Sangre de Cristo range to the east and the San Juan Mountains to the west, and the annual Crane Festival draws birders and curious first-timers alike for guided refuge tours and one of the more quietly spectacular wildlife events in the American West. Great Sand Dunes National Park is an easy day trip, and the Rio Grande National Forest offers hiking and cross-country ski trails for every season. Colorado's oldest professional rodeo, the Ski-Hi Stampede, has been running here every July since 1919.

Stay here

Dubois, Wyoming

If you're driving between Yellowstone and Jackson Hole and you're doing it right, you slow down in Dubois. Set in the Wind River Canyon at 6,900 feet, this small ranching town is surrounded by scenery that rivals its famous neighbors, yet sees a fraction of their traffic. The National Bighorn Sheep Interpretive Center is one of the best wildlife education experiences in the Rockies, and the backcountry of the Shoshone National Forest beckons backpackers and horseback riders seeking true solitude. Wake up here with the Wind Rivers out the window.

Stay here & here

Fairview, Utah

Fairview anchors the northern end of Sanpete Valley, a corridor of small pioneer towns stretching south through scenery that Utah's more famous parks have somehow failed to overshadow. The Manti-La Sal National Forest presses up against the town to the east, offering hiking, mountain biking, ATV routes through aspen groves and canyon country, and a ski area bringing winter tourism to a valley that has long offered four-season beauty with no fanfare.

Stay here & here

Fort Peck Lake, Montana

When the Army Corps of Engineers dammed the Missouri River in 1937, they created something extraordinary: one of the largest man-made lakes in the United States, stretching 134 miles through the shortgrass prairie of northeastern Montana. Fort Peck Lake remains one of the country's great undiscovered recreational destinations - offering world-class walleye and paddlefish fishing, hundreds of miles of undeveloped shoreline for camping and boating, and a landscape of buttes and badlands so vast it feels prehistoric. The small town of Fort Peck carries a quiet, timeless quality, anchored by the historic Fort Peck Theatre and the Fort Peck Dam Interpretive Center.

Stay here

Goldfield, Nevada

In 1904, Goldfield was the largest city in Nevada. Today, fewer than 300 people call it home, and that's precisely what makes it extraordinary. Goldfield isn't a theme park version of the Wild West; it's the real thing, slowly returning to the desert. On the main street, weathered storefronts stand exactly as they were left when the boom went bust. History buffs, photographers, and road-trippers on the lonely stretch of US Route 95 have quietly made Goldfield a pilgrimage site.

Stay here

Haines, Alaska

Most visitors to Alaska never venture beyond Anchorage or Juneau. Haines rewards the ones who do. Tucked at the northern end of the Lynn Canal fjord and surrounded by glacier-carved peaks and boreal forest, Haines has never quite surrendered its frontier character. The Chilkoot Lake State Recreation Site is a haven for brown bears fishing for salmon in late summer-one of the most spectacular wildlife spectacles in North America. Fort William H. Seward, a decommissioned military post turned arts village, anchors the town's cultural life. This is Alaska as it was meant to be experienced.

Stay here

Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan

Long before the California Gold Rush, there was copper. The Keweenaw Peninsula, jutting into the cold blue depths of Lake Superior from Michigan's Upper Peninsula, was the site of America's original mining boom - and Keweenaw National Historical Park lets you descend into actual copper mines and trace an industrial era few Americans know about. But the Keweenaw is far more than history. Mount Bohemia draws hardcore skiers for some of North America's deepest powder. Fat-tire bikers flock to hundreds of miles of trail winding through birch and pine forest. Dark-sky enthusiasts come for nights that feel like the edge of the world. And the Finnish-American heritage running through towns like Calumet and Copper Harbor gives the whole peninsula a culture utterly its own.

Stay here & here

Matador, Texas

Welcome to the seat of Motley County - where the wind is constant, the skies are enormous, and the history is deeper than the caprock beneath your boots. Drive 40 miles north to Caprock Canyons State Park, home to one of the last free-roaming bison herds in the country, a living link to the southern Plains ecosystem. Back in town, the Motley County Historical Museum tells the story of frontier ranching life in vivid detail. This is Texas that tourists haven't found yet - and that's exactly why it's worth finding.

Stay here

Naalehu, Hawaii

Na'alehu is the southernmost town in the United States, a fact that draws a certain number of visitors down through Ka'u every year. Punalu'u Black Sand Beach is twelve minutes from town and is one of the few places in Hawaii where endangered hawksbill turtles regularly come ashore in broad daylight. The Punalu'u Bake Shop makes Hawaiian sweetbread from a recipe passed down for generations, and the line is worth it.

Stay here and here

Pine Creek Gorge, Pennsylvania

They call it the Pennsylvania Grand Canyon for good reason. Carved over millennia by Pine Creek through the Tioga State Forest, this 47-mile gorge plunges up to 1,000 feet deep - a geological drama hiding in plain sight in one of the least-visited corners of the Keystone State. Hike the rim trail, rent a kayak to paddle the creek below, or catch a sunset that turns the canyon walls amber and rose. Nearby Wellsboro serves as a charming base camp, complete with a famous gas-lit main street.

Stay here & here

Pinos Altos, New Mexico

Just three miles north of Silver City, Pinos Altos feels several generations removed. This former silver mining camp sits at 7,000 feet in the Gila National Forest, surrounded by trails leading into the Gila Wilderness - America's first designated wilderness area. The Buckhorn Saloon & Opera House serves steaks and live music in a building that dates to the 1860s. Apache history runs deep here; Geronimo himself knew these mountains intimately. For hikers, birders, and anyone drawn to the collision of history and wilderness, Pinos Altos is a base camp that requires no compromise.

Stay here

Sekiu, Washington

Perched at the northernmost tip of Washington's Olympic Peninsula along the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Sekiu is the kind of place where bald eagles are unremarkable and the salmon are legendary. This tiny fishing village draws serious anglers and kayakers who want the raw Pacific Northwest without the crowds of Olympic National Park's more famous trailheads. Explore sea stacks at low tide, watch gray whales during spring migration, or simply sit at the water's edge as fog rolls in off the strait.

Stay here - (Photo credit: Forest2Sea Real Estate Photography)

Snowflake, Arizona

Named after two of its founders, Erastus Snow and William Flake, Snowflake sits at over 5,600 feet in the high desert of eastern Arizona, where the air is cooler, the ponderosa pines grow tall, and the pace of life is refreshingly unhurried. Just a short drive away, the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests offer some of Arizona's finest hiking, with trails threading through pine and aspen alongside cool mountain lakes, a world away from the saguaro-and-heat Arizona most visitors imagine. The White Mountains provide year-round outdoor recreation, from skiing in winter to fly fishing in summer.

Stay here & here

Stanley, Virginia

The Shenandoah Valley draws millions of visitors each year - and most of them drive right through Stanley without stopping. That's their loss. Just minutes from the western entrance of Shenandoah National Park and the banks of the Shenandoah River, this small Page County town offers everything the Valley is famous for - mountain views, hiking trails, tubing and fishing, scenic drives along Skyline Drive, without the congestion of more well-known gateways. Stop by Wisteria Farm & Vineyard for a glass of local wine with a view of the Blue Ridge. These stays put guests in the heart of a landscape that has been making travelers stop and stare for centuries.

Stay here & here - (Photo credit: C.L. Russell Photography)

Sodus Point, New York

For generations of upstate New Yorkers, Sodus Point has been the Lake Ontario escape: a narrow finger of land at the mouth of Sodus Bay where fishing boats go out before sunrise and sunsets over open water are the kind people specifically drive hours to see. The Sodus Bay Lighthouse, one of the best-preserved on the Great Lakes, anchors a waterfront of small docks, ice cream shops, and porch chairs facing the water. Wayne County's apple and cherry orchards ripen in late summer just inland, and the local farm stands and cider trail make a compelling case for staying longer than planned.

Stay here & here

Cedar Key, Florida

This small island fishing village of about 700 people is surrounded by 13 offshore wilderness islands managed as a national wildlife refuge, making it one of the premier birdwatching destinations on the Gulf Coast. The local clam aquaculture industry is the backbone of the economy and the subject of water tours that give visitors an unusually direct look at where their seafood actually comes from. Kayak through mangrove tunnels, eat fresh-caught fish at a table overlooking the water, and watch the sun go down over a Gulf horizon with nothing in the way.

Stay here

Wilmington, Illinois

Wilmington sits along a stretch of historic Route 66 in Will County, where a 30-foot fiberglass spaceman named Gemini Giant has stood watch outside the Launching Pad Drive-In since 1965. That tells you something essential about the spirit of this place. The Kankakee River curves through the region, offering fishing, canoeing, and riverside trails. The town's historic downtown preserves a slice of mid-century American road culture that the interstate system tried its best to bypass. For travelers who love the romance of the American road trip, Wilmington delivers.

Stay here

Alexandria, New Hampshire

Newfound Lake, four miles from Alexandria, is fed by eight freshwater springs, reaches 183 feet deep, and is consistently ranked among the cleanest lakes in the United States, a superlative the people who've been coming here quietly for decades already know. Mount Cardigan rises to the east, its bare granite summit offering 360-degree views that stretch to the White Mountains on a clear day, and Sculptured Rocks Natural Area follows a glacially carved bedrock gorge down to a waterhole locals will tell you is the best natural waterslide in New England. Alexandria itself is barely a village: a town common, a general store, and the kind of stillness that's getting harder to find.

Stay here- (Photo credit: Chris & Pam Daniele) & here

Matador, Texas

Welcome to the seat of Motley County - where the wind is constant, the skies are enormous, and the history is deeper than the caprock beneath your boots. Drive 40 miles north to Caprock Canyons State Park, home to one of the last free-roaming bison herds in the country, a living link to the southern Plains ecosystem. Back in town, the Motley County Historical Museum tells the story of frontier ranching life in vivid detail. This is Texas that tourists haven't found yet - and that's exactly why it's worth finding.

Stay here

Arnaudville, Louisiana

Arnaudville doesn't advertise itself. It doesn't have to. One of Louisiana's oldest settlements, this small bayou town on the Teche operates entirely on its own cultural frequency. About 40% of residents speak Cajun French at home, and that living language animates everything from the traditional music at Bayou Teche Brewery - where live Cajun and Zydeco sets are a weekend institution - to the French-language programming at NUNU Arts and Culture Collective, a community arts space that doubles as a gathering place for local artisans and storytellers. Swamp tours on Bayou Teche reveal an ecosystem teeming with herons, alligators, and Spanish moss.

Stay here

Naalehu, Hawaii

Na'alehu is the southernmost town in the United States, a fact that draws a certain number of visitors down through Ka'u every year. Punalu'u Black Sand Beach is twelve minutes from town and is one of the few places in Hawaii where endangered hawksbill turtles regularly come ashore in broad daylight. The Punalu'u Bake Shop makes Hawaiian sweetbread from a recipe passed down for generations, and the line is worth it.

Stay here and here

Coarsegold, California

Gold was discovered in Coarsegold in 1849, and the town has been pleasantly unhurried about everything since. Sitting in the Sierra Nevada foothills along the historic mining corridor, it offers antique stores, working cattle ranches, and art studios alongside something the gateway towns closer to Yosemite's south entrance increasingly can't: space. The park itself is about 20 miles up the road, close enough for a day trip and far enough to avoid the parking queues and dawn check-ins that define the visitor experience further up Highway 41.

Stay here

Pine Creek Gorge, Pennsylvania

They call it the Pennsylvania Grand Canyon for good reason. Carved over millennia by Pine Creek through the Tioga State Forest, this 47-mile gorge plunges up to 1,000 feet deep - a geological drama hiding in plain sight in one of the least-visited corners of the Keystone State. Hike the rim trail, rent a kayak to paddle the creek below, or catch a sunset that turns the canyon walls amber and rose. Nearby Wellsboro serves as a charming base camp, complete with a famous gas-lit main street.

Stay here & here

Monte Vista, Colorado

Each March, more than 20,000 sandhill cranes descend on the San Luis Valley during their northward migration, and Monte Vista has been watching them pass for longer than anyone can remember. The Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge sits just south of town, flanked by the Sangre de Cristo range to the east and the San Juan Mountains to the west, and the annual Crane Festival draws birders and curious first-timers alike for guided refuge tours and one of the more quietly spectacular wildlife events in the American West. Great Sand Dunes National Park is an easy day trip, and the Rio Grande National Forest offers hiking and cross-country ski trails for every season. Colorado's oldest professional rodeo, the Ski-Hi Stampede, has been running here every July since 1919.

Stay here

Pinos Altos, New Mexico

Just three miles north of Silver City, Pinos Altos feels several generations removed. This former silver mining camp sits at 7,000 feet in the Gila National Forest, surrounded by trails leading into the Gila Wilderness - America's first designated wilderness area. The Buckhorn Saloon & Opera House serves steaks and live music in a building that dates to the 1860s. Apache history runs deep here; Geronimo himself knew these mountains intimately. For hikers, birders, and anyone drawn to the collision of history and wilderness, Pinos Altos is a base camp that requires no compromise.

Stay here

Dubois, Wyoming

If you're driving between Yellowstone and Jackson Hole and you're doing it right, you slow down in Dubois. Set in the Wind River Canyon at 6,900 feet, this small ranching town is surrounded by scenery that rivals its famous neighbors, yet sees a fraction of their traffic. The National Bighorn Sheep Interpretive Center is one of the best wildlife education experiences in the Rockies, and the backcountry of the Shoshone National Forest beckons backpackers and horseback riders seeking true solitude. Wake up here with the Wind Rivers out the window.

Stay here & here

Sekiu, Washington

Perched at the northernmost tip of Washington's Olympic Peninsula along the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Sekiu is the kind of place where bald eagles are unremarkable and the salmon are legendary. This tiny fishing village draws serious anglers and kayakers who want the raw Pacific Northwest without the crowds of Olympic National Park's more famous trailheads. Explore sea stacks at low tide, watch gray whales during spring migration, or simply sit at the water's edge as fog rolls in off the strait.

Stay here- (Photo credit: Forest2Sea Real Estate Photography)

Fairview, Utah

Fairview anchors the northern end of Sanpete Valley, a corridor of small pioneer towns stretching south through scenery that Utah's more famous parks have somehow failed to overshadow. The Manti-La Sal National Forest presses up against the town to the east, offering hiking, mountain biking, ATV routes through aspen groves and canyon country, and a ski area bringing winter tourism to a valley that has long offered four-season beauty with no fanfare.

Stay here & here

Snowflake, Arizona

Named after two of its founders, Erastus Snow and William Flake, Snowflake sits at over 5,600 feet in the high desert of eastern Arizona, where the air is cooler, the ponderosa pines grow tall, and the pace of life is refreshingly unhurried. Just a short drive away, the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests offer some of Arizona's finest hiking, with trails threading through pine and aspen alongside cool mountain lakes, a world away from the saguaro-and-heat Arizona most visitors imagine. The White Mountains provide year-round outdoor recreation, from skiing in winter to fly fishing in summer.

Stay here & here

Fort Peck Lake, Montana

When the Army Corps of Engineers dammed the Missouri River in 1937, they created something extraordinary: one of the largest man-made lakes in the United States, stretching 134 miles through the shortgrass prairie of northeastern Montana. Fort Peck Lake remains one of the country's great undiscovered recreational destinations - offering world-class walleye and paddlefish fishing, hundreds of miles of undeveloped shoreline for camping and boating, and a landscape of buttes and badlands so vast it feels prehistoric. The small town of Fort Peck carries a quiet, timeless quality, anchored by the historic Fort Peck Theatre and the Fort Peck Dam Interpretive Center.

Stay here

Stanley, Virginia

The Shenandoah Valley draws millions of visitors each year - and most of them drive right through Stanley without stopping. That's their loss. Just minutes from the western entrance of Shenandoah National Park and the banks of the Shenandoah River, this small Page County town offers everything the Valley is famous for - mountain views, hiking trails, tubing and fishing, scenic drives along Skyline Drive, without the congestion of more well-known gateways. Stop by Wisteria Farm & Vineyard for a glass of local wine with a view of the Blue Ridge. These stays put guests in the heart of a landscape that has been making travelers stop and stare for centuries.

Stay here & here - (Photo credit: C.L. Russell Photography)

Goldfield, Nevada

In 1904, Goldfield was the largest city in Nevada. Today, fewer than 300 people call it home, and that's precisely what makes it extraordinary. Goldfield isn't a theme park version of the Wild West; it's the real thing, slowly returning to the desert. On the main street, weathered storefronts stand exactly as they were left when the boom went bust. History buffs, photographers, and road-trippers on the lonely stretch of US Route 95 have quietly made Goldfield a pilgrimage site.

Stay here

Sodus Point, New York

For generations of upstate New Yorkers, Sodus Point has been the Lake Ontario escape: a narrow finger of land at the mouth of Sodus Bay where fishing boats go out before sunrise and sunsets over open water are the kind people specifically drive hours to see. The Sodus Bay Lighthouse, one of the best-preserved on the Great Lakes, anchors a waterfront of small docks, ice cream shops, and porch chairs facing the water. Wayne County's apple and cherry orchards ripen in late summer just inland, and the local farm stands and cider trail make a compelling case for staying longer than planned.

Stay here & here

Haines, Alaska

Most visitors to Alaska never venture beyond Anchorage or Juneau. Haines rewards the ones who do. Tucked at the northern end of the Lynn Canal fjord and surrounded by glacier-carved peaks and boreal forest, Haines has never quite surrendered its frontier character. The Chilkoot Lake State Recreation Site is a haven for brown bears fishing for salmon in late summer-one of the most spectacular wildlife spectacles in North America. Fort William H. Seward, a decommissioned military post turned arts village, anchors the town's cultural life. This is Alaska as it was meant to be experienced.

Stay here

Cedar Key, Florida

This small island fishing village of about 700 people is surrounded by 13 offshore wilderness islands managed as a national wildlife refuge, making it one of the premier birdwatching destinations on the Gulf Coast. The local clam aquaculture industry is the backbone of the economy and the subject of water tours that give visitors an unusually direct look at where their seafood actually comes from. Kayak through mangrove tunnels, eat fresh-caught fish at a table overlooking the water, and watch the sun go down over a Gulf horizon with nothing in the way.

Stay here

Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan

Long before the California Gold Rush, there was copper. The Keweenaw Peninsula, jutting into the cold blue depths of Lake Superior from Michigan's Upper Peninsula, was the site of America's original mining boom - and Keweenaw National Historical Park lets you descend into actual copper mines and trace an industrial era few Americans know about. But the Keweenaw is far more than history. Mount Bohemia draws hardcore skiers for some of North America's deepest powder. Fat-tire bikers flock to hundreds of miles of trail winding through birch and pine forest. Dark-sky enthusiasts come for nights that feel like the edge of the world. And the Finnish-American heritage running through towns like Calumet and Copper Harbor gives the whole peninsula a culture utterly its own.

Stay here & here

Wilmington, Illinois

Wilmington sits along a stretch of historic Route 66 in Will County, where a 30-foot fiberglass spaceman named Gemini Giant has stood watch outside the Launching Pad Drive-In since 1965. That tells you something essential about the spirit of this place. The Kankakee River curves through the region, offering fishing, canoeing, and riverside trails. The town's historic downtown preserves a slice of mid-century American road culture that the interstate system tried its best to bypass. For travelers who love the romance of the American road trip, Wilmington delivers.

Stay here

Airbnb Inc. published this content on March 23, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on March 24, 2026 at 02:05 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]