Travel guides

Bitcoin travel guides for real trips

Airbtc travel guides focus on one thing: how to actually travel on Bitcoin. Less influencer fluff, more concrete info on paying in sats, staying safe and finding other Bitcoiners on the ground – guides written around sats, not card points or fiat hacks.

Live guides

Bitcoin travel guides that are already live

These are the first 1 Bitcoin travel guides tied to active or upcoming stays and routes. More will be added as new destinations and host flows go live.

Guide types

What the guides focus on

These guides are written for people actually travelling or hosting on Bitcoin — not generic SEO content.

City & region primers

Short primers for Bitcoin-heavy cities and regions: where to stay, how to move around, what it roughly costs and how normal Bitcoin payments are on the street.

On-the-ground basics
  • Where to base yourself (for a week, a month, longer)
  • Rough daily budget in local currency and sats
  • How common Bitcoin payments are in real life

Paying in sats while travelling

Concrete examples of paying for food, transport and activities in sats — plus what to do when you can’t. No ideology, just how it actually works.

Using Bitcoin day to day
  • When you can pay in BTC vs when you can’t
  • Handling volatility and topping up balances
  • Backup options that don’t wreck your stack

Hosting Bitcoiners in your home

Guides for people listing on Airbtc: how to price in sats, set expectations, handle volatility and explain the Bitcoin angle clearly to guests.

For hosts
  • Pricing your stay in sats without overcomplicating it
  • Explaining “Bitcoin-only” to non-Bitcoiner friends
  • Simple house rules that avoid drama

Safety, custody & operations

Checklists for both hosts and guests: self-custody basics, privacy hygiene, what not to do with keys, and how to avoid obvious scams on the move.

No-nonsense hygiene
  • What stays on your phone, what doesn’t
  • Travelling with hardware wallets (or not)
  • Recognising and avoiding common travel scams

Format, cadence and who writes them

The guides are meant to be used, not just read:

  • Short and focused — most guides should be readable in 5–10 minutes.
  • Written by actual users — hosts, guests and local Bitcoiners who know the area.
  • Updated when things change — if adoption, laws or safety shift, the guide gets edited.

Early on, expect a small set of guides tied to the first real listings. Volume comes after the core travel flows are solid.

Until the guide library is dense, the live product is still the most honest guide.

Browse live stays or read how Airbtc works under the hood.