GetYourGuide deals pushed
Condé Nast Traveler promoted GetYourGuide deals covering more than 100,000 experiences—everything from skip‑the‑line tickets to guided tours—and included verified discount codes in a social post. The promotion frames experience bookings as part of travel planning workflows. (x.com)
Condé Nast Traveler is pitching GetYourGuide not just as a booking site, but as a core step in trip planning, pairing its deal coverage with verified promo codes in a commerce post. (cntraveler.com) The Condé Nast Traveler deal page says travelers can “save on over 100,000 experiences,” including skip-the-line museum tickets and guided outdoor adventures, and it was published in April 2026. GetYourGuide’s own discount page says new users can get 10% off a first booking by email signup and use the code at checkout. (cntraveler.com) (getyourguide.com) GetYourGuide’s marketplace currently lists tours, attraction tickets, and activities across major destinations including Rome, Paris, Amsterdam, New York City, Boston, and Chicago. On its consumer site, the company highlights inventory such as 522 Vatican Museums activities, 533 Eiffel Tower activities, and 111 United States Capitol activities. (getyourguide.com) The push lands as GetYourGuide is explicitly trying to move experiences earlier in the planning funnel, before travelers lock in the rest of a trip. On April 13, 2026, the company announced a Rome2Rio partnership that inserts bookable attractions and tours directly into route planning. (getyourguide.press) Rome2Rio said the integration brings GetYourGuide’s catalog of more than 200,000 experiences across 18,000 cities into trip searches, so users can see transport options and activities in one flow. GetYourGuide’s press center now describes the company as offering 200,000 experiences and serving 18,000 cities with 50,000 supply partners. (rome2rio.com) (getyourguide.press) That is a bigger number than the “over 100,000 experiences” used in Condé Nast Traveler’s promotion, which suggests the publisher was using a narrower or older commerce framing rather than the company’s latest global inventory figure. The underlying pitch is the same: book the attraction, tour, or timed-entry ticket while you are still deciding where to go and how to get there. (cntraveler.com) (getyourguide.press) GetYourGuide has been building toward that position for several years. In June 2023, the Berlin-based company said it raised $194 million in equity and credit financing, and said the money would support expansion in North America and product development for travelers and supply partners. (getyourguide.press) The company said in that 2023 announcement that first-quarter booking volumes were four times higher than in the first quarter of 2019, tying its growth to a broader shift toward spending on experiences. Condé Nast Traveler’s latest deal post fits that same retail logic, packaging tours and attraction tickets the way publishers long packaged airfare, hotel, and luggage deals. (getyourguide.press) For travelers, the immediate offer is simple: discount codes and a large menu of bookable activities. For publishers and platforms, the bigger play is turning “what to do” into something travelers shop for before they ever arrive. (cntraveler.com) (getyourguide.press)