WeRoad, the Milan-based group travel platform founded in 2017 by Paolo De Nadai, Fabio Bin, and Erika De Santi, closed a $58 million Series C on Tuesday led by Airbnb, as it prepares its first major expansion outside Europe. The funding brings the company’s total capital raised to roughly $100 million – and the Airbnb lead, which NewsTrackerToday cross-checked as the most strategically significant element of the round, signals a move beyond accommodation into the group itinerary market. The U.S. launch begins in Austin, where WeRoad plans to build community partnerships and recruit group leaders before expanding to further cities. The company generated €130 million in revenue in 2025, up 30% year-over-year, and took more than 100,000 travelers on trips last year. Since launching, it has organized travel for more than 300,000 customers across over 1,000 itineraries.
WeRoad’s product is structurally different from package tourism. Trips are designed primarily for younger travelers, grouped by shared interest and travel style around themes like beach vacations or skiing. Groups typically run between eight and fifteen travelers. Before departure, participants join a WhatsApp group managed by the group leader so connections can start forming before anyone boards a plane. Itineraries deliberately schedule more collaborative or adventurous activities early to break the ice between strangers. Group leaders are not destination experts but people with travel experience and strong interpersonal skills – coordinators closer in age to the travelers who act more like companions than guides. The company now works with more than 4,000 group leaders globally, a number that WeRoad cross-checked against what it sees as the differentiating factor in repeat booking rates.
Isabella Moretti, who covers corporate strategy and M&A, examines what Airbnb’s lead position means: “Airbnb has a strategic interest in expanding the travel occasion beyond accommodation. WeRoad gives them a direct link to the group itinerary market where accommodation is one component of a broader trip spend. At €130 million in revenue, WeRoad is well past proof-of-concept. The valuation implied by the Series C is probably in the 3 to 5 times revenue range, which is reasonable for a company growing at 30% with 60% repeat booking rates and a capital-efficient model that relies on commission rather than inventory ownership. What Airbnb gets is distribution access and insight into a customer segment that is traveling in groups, spending meaningfully, and not booking through hotel platforms.”
The company also launched WeMeet in 2025, an app for local in-person events including dinners, hikes, yoga classes, and after-work gatherings. More than 50,000 people attended WeMeet events across 35 cities last year. The app reached 150,000 downloads. WeRoad describes WeMeet as central to its U.S. expansion strategy: rather than launching travel products immediately, the company plans to build local communities first through events, creating customer relationships before trying to convert them to international bookings. That sequencing is what NewsTrackerToday put on record as a deliberate market-entry approach, rather than a simple platform extension.
Ethan Cole reads the macro signal succinctly: “Loneliness as a business category is real and growing. U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy’s 2023 advisory on the loneliness epidemic shifted how capital thinks about in-person social products. But converting social anxiety into recurring revenue at scale hasn’t been proven at WeRoad’s growth stage. Austin is a good test city – young, transient, community-driven. If repeat booking rates hold in a new market without the word-of-mouth density WeRoad built in Italy, France, and Spain over eight years, that’s a genuine signal.” The 60% rebooking rate within WeRoad’s existing European markets is the anchor number that the Austin performance will test, and it is what NewsTrackerToday clocked as the metric that will define whether the U.S. push validates the model or stalls it.
But the question the funding does not answer is whether WeRoad can export the social dynamic that makes its product work, not just the itinerary logistics. The company’s entire thesis depends on strangers genuinely connecting – on WhatsApp groups before departure and through shared ice-breaking activities on arrival. That outcome is reproducible in European cities where WeRoad has spent years calibrating group composition, leader selection, and itinerary pacing. It is less certain in a U.S. market where the cultural baseline around group travel with strangers is different, and where the company’s brand has no existing presence. The 30% revenue growth and the Airbnb lead check are evidence of a real business. Whether the social chemistry that News Tracker Today surfaces as WeRoad’s actual product travels as well as the booking platform does is the open question the next 12 months in Austin will begin to answer.