Quarter 2022 conference call. Booking Holdings would like to remind everyone that this call may contain forward-looking statements which are pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to certain risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Therefore, actual results may differ materially from those expressed, implied, or forecasted in any such forward-looking statements. Expressions of future goals or expectations and similar expressions reflecting something other than historical facts are intended to identify forward-looking statements. For a list of factors that could cause Booking Holdings actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements, please refer to the safe harbor statements at the end of Booking Holdings earnings press release, as well as Booking Holdings most recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Unless required by law, Booking Holdings undertakes no obligation to update publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. A copy of Booking Holdings earnings press release, together with an accompanying financial and statistical supplement, is available in the For Investors section of Booking Holdings website, www.bookingholdings.com. Now I'd like to introduce Booking Holdings speakers for this afternoon, Glenn Fogel and David Goulden. Go ahead, gentlemen.
Thank you, and welcome to Booking Holdings first quarter conference call. I'm joined this afternoon by our CFO, David Goulden. I am pleased to begin by reporting that our first quarter was a record. Our customers booked $27 billion in gross bookings, the highest quarterly amount ever. The continued improvement in our room night trends, increased accommodation ADRs, and significant growth in our global flight products all contributed to achieving this gross bookings record. In our accommodations business, we saw meaningful improvement from last year, with first quarter room nights declining only 9% versus Q1 2019, which was an improvement of 12 percentage points from our fourth quarter 2021 results.
Our bookings continued to strengthen in April, with room nights increasing 10% and gross bookings up over 30% versus 2019, making April a record month for gross bookings and the first month that global room nights exceeded 2019 levels. At Booking.com, I'm encouraged by the strong gross bookings already recorded for the summer period, which are over 15% higher than at this same point in 2019. In Western Europe and North America, gross bookings for the summer period are now over 30% ahead of where we were at this point in 2019, though I note that a high percentage of these bookings are cancelable.
Across our brands, our other brands, we are seeing the benefits of a global recovery from the pandemic with strong travel demand in the U.S. for Priceline, a rapid recent improvement in trends in Asia for Agoda, an uptick in international flight searches at Kayak, and the return of diners to restaurants for OpenTable. In many countries, especially across Europe and Asia, travel restrictions were eased in the first quarter, which we believe has contributed to the strengthening of travel demand trends. As we have said before, when leisure travelers believe it is safe to travel and restrictions are lifted, people book travel. With that being said, there are still restrictions and inconveniences imposed on travelers today by some countries, though we believe that the industry is moving in the right direction and progressing back to normalcy.
While we are pleased with the trends we are seeing right now across our brands, as we look towards the rest of the year, we are cognizant of the potential for macro uncertainty and are aware that inflation or other macro factors may have an impact on consumer demand. Now before providing further updates on our business, I wanna address the devastating war in Ukraine. Since first hearing the terrible news of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, our first priority was the safety of our colleagues and supporting them through this time. We worked closely with our employees and their families in Ukraine to provide them with safe refuge, and we have continued to support humanitarian efforts in the region. As we previously disclosed, in early March, we suspended travel services in Russia and Belarus.
By mid-March, Booking.com developed and launched a no-commission initiative that enabled properties in select European countries to offer free or heavily discounted accommodations to refugees fleeing Ukraine. We believe that about 30,000 refugees have been provided with places to stay through this initiative so far. We continue to work closely with our hotel and home partners and expect to expand this program to more properties in the region. As an example, Booking.com has partnered with Hilton and the UN Refugee Agency to make it easy for NGOs to book temporary accommodations on behalf of refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine. These rooms have been made available for free by Hilton at hundreds of their properties across Europe, which we in turn are providing through our platform. I am very proud of our team's quick actions to help our employees, customers, partners, and the many people impacted by these tragic events.
Of course, we all hope this barbaric violence ends soon. Let's now turn to the progress we're making in our business. We continue our work strengthening our core accommodation business by driving benefits to our traveler customers and to our supply partners. For our customers, we are focused on their critical needs of value, choice, and convenience. With this high degree of customer focus, we aim to increase loyalty, frequency, spend, and direct relationships with our customers over time. In March, our unique active customers at Booking.com were within 95% of 2019 levels, driven by strong growth in returning customers who had not made a previous booking in over a year. In the first quarter, we saw a higher mix of customers booking directly with us than in any of the last three years first quarters.
We see the strongest direct repeat customer behavior in our mobile app when compared to other platforms like desktop or mobile web. We continue to see more of our business shift to the app with over 40% of our room nights booked through our apps in the first quarter. Booking.com's app hit a new record in terms of monthly active users in Q1 and continue to be the number one downloaded OTA app globally, according to a third-party research firm. As I said before, the app is a critical platform as it allows us more opportunities to engage directly with travelers and ultimately we see it as the center of our Connected Trip experience. We will continue our efforts to enhance the app to build on the recent success we have seen here.
For our supply partners, we strive to be a valuable partner to all accommodation types on our platform, which primarily means bringing incremental demand to properties from the broad audience of potential customers on our platform. For alternative accommodations, our global mix of room nights in the first quarter increased to about 31%, a couple of points higher than in Q1 2021. We continue to work on improving our alternative accommodation product globally with an additional focus on the U.S. market. We've been working closely with property partners to identify opportunities to improve our platform to better fit their needs. Related to these efforts, we launched partner liability insurance for our alternative accommodation supply partners with global coverage in the first quarter. In addition, we are making progress on an enhanced payment solution for professional property managers that we're rolling out in the U.S..
In the first quarter, we saw the largest sequential net increase in alternative accommodation properties on Booking.com since the start of the pandemic. While the net increase in Q1 was still a modest number of properties, we are aiming to build on this growth throughout 2022 by continuing to improve our alternative accommodation offering and attracting more partners to our platform. This week, we launched a new campaign in the U.S. to promote Booking.com to alternative accommodation owners and managers who wanna grow their business with us. Let me now talk about the progress we've made in our interrelated strategic priorities of payments and the Connected Trip. We believe both of these priorities will further enhance the strength of our core accommodations business and support its continued growth.
On payments, 34% of Booking.com's gross bookings were processed through our payment platform in the first quarter, which is our highest quarterly level ever. This year, we are focused on continuing to increase supplier adoption of payments while introducing new products and features that over time will improve the customer and partner experience and bring new revenue streams to our platform. We will continue to position Booking.com as an attractive and trusted payment service for both travelers and our supplier partners across hotels, alternative accommodations, cars, flights, and attractions. Furthermore, Booking.com's payment platform helps deliver a more seamless and frictionless booking experience, which are important elements of our larger Connected Trip vision. On our Connected Trip vision, we continue to make progress as we work on the foundations, such as developing a flight offering on Booking.com, which is now live in 40 countries.
This flight offering gives us the ability to engage with potential customers who choose their flight options early in their discovery process and allows us an opportunity to cross-sell our accommodation and other services to these flight bookers. We have seen that in over 70% of our flight bookings on Booking.com, the flight was the first or only product that was booked. This helps confirm the value of flights as the starting point in many people's booking journey and is an anchor product that we can utilize to cross-sell accommodations and other products. A meaningful percentage of bookers who first book a flight then book an accommodation. We will continue our work to further optimize the cross-sell opportunity and build on the early positive signals that we're seeing so far.
Flights continues to be a source for new customers with about one quarter of all flight bookers in Q1 being new customers for Booking.com. We've also seen recent success driving incremental room nights in experiments where discounts were applied to non-accommodation products that were attached to the transaction. To put it simply. We believe having more products on the shelf increases our merchandising opportunities and helps us sell more room nights. Finally, as I previewed on our last earnings call, we published our 2021 sustainability report and our climate action plan in March. In our climate action plan, we highlighted the significant emission reductions we've already achieved, in part driven by sourcing 100% renewable energy for our offices by the end of last year. We are committed to more than halving our emissions by 2030 and achieving net zero emissions by 2040.
We are proud of the emissions reduction achieved and ambitious targets set for our own business. As I said before, we believe our greatest influence on sustainable travel is through making it easier for travelers to find and book sustainable options. We are addressing this opportunity through our work with our Travel Sustainable program, which now includes over 100,000 properties that can highlight their sustainable practices to customers on Booking.com. In conclusion, I am encouraged by the strength we are seeing in bookings, the level of summer travel on our books, and the potential for a very busy travel year ahead. As we discussed last quarter, in this recovery environment, we will continue to lean into performance marketing channels at appropriate ROIs as we look to bring more customer demand to our platform.
Overall, we believe we are well-positioned to continue capturing this returning travel demand, and we will continue our work executing against our strategic priorities. As I said before, we are focusing on building a larger and faster-growing business with more products that is sustainable and generates more earnings dollars for the long run. I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, David Goulden.
Thank you, Glenn, and good afternoon. I'll review our results for the first quarter and provide some color on trends we've seen so far in the second quarter. All growth rates for 2022 are relative to the comparable period in 2019 unless otherwise indicated. Information regarding reconciliation of non-GAAP results to GAAP results can be found in our earnings release. Now on to our results for the first quarter. On our February earnings call, we discussed the improvement in trends we've seen so far in 2022, with room nights getting back to about flat versus 2019 in the first half of February after declining 21% in January. Just hours after our earnings call on February 23rd, the terrible news broke that Russia had invaded Ukraine. As a result, we saw an immediate negative impact on room night trends, particularly in Eastern Europe.
Despite this impact towards the end of the month, room nights for the full month of February came in about in line with 2019 levels. In early March, we suspended the booking of travel services in Russia and Belarus. This led to a loss of new bookings as well as significantly elevated levels of cancellations of reservations for these countries. Additionally, we saw some slowdown in booking trends within Europe as travelers took in the news of the invasion. We disclosed that total room nights for the week ending March sixth were down about 10%, and that slowdown was driven by Eastern Europe, primarily Russia, and to a lesser extent by Western Europe, which remained mostly above 2019 levels.
I'm pleased to say that compared with the first week in March, we saw our overall trends improve during March, driven mainly by Europe, resulting in room nights being down about 4% for the month, which is only a modest pullback from where we were in February. For the first quarter, room nights were down 9%, an improvement from down 21% in Q4, and our best quarter results since the onset of the pandemic. Excluding Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, our room nights were down about 2% in March and down about 6% for the first full quarter. For Q1 on a regional level, room nights in Europe and the rest of the world were both down mid-single digits. Asia was down about 35%, with all three improving from Q4 levels.
The U.S. has strong growth versus Q1 2019, similar to what we saw in Q4. Mobile bookings, primarily through our apps, represented about 60% of our total room nights in the first quarter. Our apps were over two-thirds of our mobile bookings and over 40% of total room nights. In the first quarter, we continued to see an increased mix of our total room nights coming to us through the direct channel versus Q1 2019 and Q1 2022. The international mix of our total room nights in Q1 was about 40%, an encouraging increase from about 33% in Q4. Q1 international room nights were down about 30% compared to Q1 2019 levels, an improvement from the almost 50% decline in Q4.
The improvements in international bookings we saw continued to be driven mainly by travel plans within Europe, and these cross-border bookings continued to have, on average, longer length of stay and a shorter booking window than comparable bookings in 2019. We saw strong growth in our domestic room nights for the first quarter, also an improvement from Q4. Our cancellation rates were about in line with 2019 levels in Q1, despite the impact of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The booking window in Q1 at Booking.com contrasted less versus 2019 than it did in Q4. This booking window expanded versus the first quarter of 2021. For our alternative accommodations at Booking.com, the global mix of room nights increased to about 31% in Q1, a couple points higher than 2021.
Within Europe, our mix of alternative accommodation continues to be meaningfully higher than the global average. Gross bookings increased 7% in Q1 versus 2019, and were up 10% excluding Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. This 7% increase in gross bookings was 16 percentage points better than the 9% room nights decline due to 18% higher accommodation constant currency ADRs and also due to strong flight bookings across the group, partially offset by about 4 percentage points of negative FX movements. As Glenn mentioned in his remarks, the $27 billion of gross bookings in Q1 is a new record for us, higher than the previous record of $25 billion in Q1 2019. March 23, 2022 was the first month our gross bookings exceeded $10 billion in a single month.
This was up 17% versus March 2019 and compares to up 18% in February and down 11% in January. Our accommodation constant currency ADRs benefited by about 3 percentage points from regional mix and about 15 percentage points from rate increases in most of our regions, most notably Europe and North America, and especially in higher demand leisure-oriented destinations. Constant currency ADR growth versus 2019 accelerated from 13% in Q4 to 18% in Q1, primarily due to higher rates in Europe. Airline tickets booked in the first quarter were up 152% versus 2019 and up 69% versus 2021, driven by continued expansion of Booking.com's flight platform, as well as continued flight ticket growth at Priceline.
Consolidated revenue for the first quarter was $2.7 billion, which was down 7% versus 2019 and down about 2% on a constant currency basis. Revenue as a percentage of gross bookings was about 150 basis points below Q1 2019, in line with our expectations, due primarily to the timing differences between gross bookings and revenue recognition. Our underlying accommodation take rates were about in line with Q1 2019 levels. Marketing expense, which is a highly variable expense line, decreased 4% versus Q1 2019. Marketing expense as a percentage of gross bookings decreased about 50 basis points versus Q1 2019, which is better than our expectations, mainly due to higher-than-expected marketing ROIs.
Sales and other expenses were up 58% versus Q1 2019 due to a higher volume of merchant gross bookings and higher third-party call center costs. About 34% of Booking.com's gross bookings were processed through our payments platform in Q1, up from 13% in Q1 2019. Compared to Q1 2021, sales and other expenses as a percentage of gross bookings were about 30 basis points higher. Our more fixed expenses in aggregate were about in line with our expectations, up 12% versus Q4 and up 17% versus Q1 2021. Adjusted EBITDA was $310 million for the quarter, which was better than our expectations due to higher-than-expected ADRs and the better-than-expected leverage on our variable expenses.
However, sequentially, EBITDA was down 67%, which is significantly more than the seasonal declines we saw pre-COVID and aligns with our commentary in February. non-GAAP net income of $161 million results in non-GAAP EPS of $3.90, which is down 65% versus Q1 2019. Our Q1 non-GAAP tax rate of 16% was lower than 19% in Q1 2019 due to a greater impact from a discrete tax benefit on a lower base of earnings. On a GAAP basis, we had operating income of $174 million in Q1.
We recorded a GAAP net loss of $700 million in the quarter, which included an unrealized loss on our strategic investments of about $987 million and a $36 million loss on assets held for sale related to the Majorel strategic partnership we discussed last quarter. Now on to our cash and liquidity position. Our Q1 ending cash and investment balance of about $12.8 billion was down versus our Q4 ending balance of $14.3 billion, primarily driven by the payments of $1.1 billion to a March debt maturity, about $950 million in share repurchases in Q1, and the decline in value of our strategic investments.
These factors which reduced our cash investment balance were partially offset by positive free cash flow of about $1.6 billion, which was driven almost entirely by change in working capital, resulting from an increase in our deferred merchant bookings balance. As we disclosed on last quarter, we started returning capital to shareholders in early January, and in addition to share purchases in Q1, we repurchased about $325 million of our shares in April, which brings our outstanding authorization to just over $9 billion. As we said before, we expect to complete our remaining authorization within the next three years. Now moving on to our thoughts for the second quarter. April room nights increased about 10% versus 2019, an improvement from the 4% decline in March, driven primarily by Europe.
Excluding Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, April room nights increased about 16% versus 2019. All regions showed improving room night growth in April. Europe was up high teens% in April and up about 30% excluding Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine. Growth in the U.S. was very strong. Rest of world had double-digit growth, and Asia recovered to down high teens% all versus 2019. The international mix of our room nights in April was over 45%, an encouraging increase from the 40% in Q1. April international room nights were down slightly compared to 2019 levels, an improvement from down 30% in Q1. International, international demand, driven mainly by travel plans in Europe, accounted for most of the improvements in room nights in April versus Q1.
Domestic room nights also improved in April to very strong growth versus 2019. April gross bookings increased over 30% versus 2019, driven by growth in room nights, continued accommodation ADR strength, as well as continued strength in flight bookings. April gross bookings increased to almost $11 billion, which was a new monthly record. April gross bookings typically decline from March pre-COVID. While it's encouraging to see continued improvements in trends into April, the environment is still uncertain and difficult to predict with confidence how room nights for the remainder of the quarter will develop. While many countries are lifting travel restrictions, COVID is still a factor which can impact travel. Of course, the war in Ukraine continues to create volatility and macro uncertainty.
We do expect the recent strength in ADR to continue for the remainder of the quarter, and as a result, we expect the difference between the level of room night growth and gross bookings growth for the full second quarter to be around 20 points, which is similar to what it was in April. In April, the overall booking window of Booking.com continues to move back closer to 2019 levels. We continue to see strength in our summer booking trends, and our gross bookings for summer are now more than 15% higher than they were at this time in 2019. Within Western Europe and North America, both up over 30%, albeit with a higher mix of cancelable bookings.
If the current trends continue, we could see a record summer travel season, and we're gearing up to prepare for that across all parts of our business. Turning back to Q2. Given recent booking trends, combined with a lengthening booking window, we expect Q2 revenue as a percentage of gross bookings to be about 200 basis points lower than it was in Q2 2019. This 200 basis points of difference in revenue as a percentage of gross bookings is mainly timing related, and the impact could be greater if booking trends accelerate from April, especially if a high percentage of these bookings will stay in future quarters.
The timing impact on take rates in Q2 is driven by a combination of the acceleration in gross bookings from up 7% in Q1 to up over 30% so far in Q2, coupled with the lengthening booking window from Q1 to Q2. We expect our underlying accommodation take rates to remain stable. We expect marketing expense as a percentage of gross bookings to be slightly higher than in Q2 2019, which is consistent with our prior commentary about the opportunities for us to lean into a recovering travel market in 2022. We expect Q2 sales and other expenses as a percentage of gross bookings to be about 60 basis points higher than it was in Q2 2021 due to higher merchant gross booking mix and higher third-party call center costs.
We expect our more fixed expenses in aggregate to be about 15% higher than in Q2 2021, with personnel down slightly and both G&A and IT up meaningfully versus Q2 last year. The overall year-on-year increase in G&A is driven by high digital sales taxes, which is tied to revenue, as well as increased office expenses due to return to hybrid work environments. We expect IT to increase year-over-year at similar rates to what we saw in Q1. If we were to see similar top-line growth rates for the rest of the quarter as we saw in April, we'd expect adjusted EBITDA to be over $900 million for the quarter.
The expected timing difference between gross bookings and revenue, which is the primary driver of our expected 200 basis points lower take rate than Q1 2019, will have a significant negative impact on EBITDA in Q2, as our more variable expense lines are linked to bookings. If we normalize the timing impact on our take rates in Q2 2022 to be the same as it was in Q2 2019, adjusted EBITDA in Q2 2022 will be slightly higher than it was in Q2 2019. Now turning to the strategic partnership with Majorel we discussed last quarter. As a reminder, Majorel, one of our most trusted long-term external customer support partners, will begin employing most of the customer service representatives that previously worked for Booking.com outside of the Netherlands and the U.K.
We currently anticipate finalizing this partnership around the middle of the year. Following the anticipated closing on a quarterly basis in the second half of 2022, we expect that personnel expenses will be lower by about $25 million a quarter, that G&A expenses will be lower by about $6 million a quarter, and our S&A expenses will increase to offset the lower personnel and G&A expenses. As we said last quarter, we do not anticipate much of an impact on adjusted EBITDA in 2022 from this initiative. Beyond 2022, we believe this partnership will help reduce further expense growth and enable a more efficient ramp-up of our customer service function. Outside of the P&L geographic changes to the personnel, G&A, sales and expense line from Majorel, we're maintaining the full year P&L commentary we provided last quarter.
As a reminder, we expect timing to negatively impact take rates. The precise impact timing on our take rates for the year is difficult to predict as it's impacted by the rate of recovery of bookings coming into and during the year and also by the length of booking windows during the year. We do know that relative to 2021 there was a negative impact on our take rates timing Q1 2022. Our current estimates of take rates in 2022 is just below 15%, which is lower than 2019 primarily due to timing. We expect that our underlying accommodation take rates will remain stable. Timing also negatively impacts adjusted EBITDA and EBITDA margins for the year.
If not for the impact timing, our expectations for full year EBITDA margins would be a few points higher than our guidance for the year. We're encouraged by our better than expected Q1 results and the strengthening trends we see in April, and we're confident that our focus on customer acquisition and expanding our product offerings is the right approach for 2022. We'll now take your questions. Charlotte, over to you please for Q&A.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one on your telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Lloyd Walmsley with UBS. Your line is now open.
All right, thanks. Taking the question, two if I can. First, you know, on the April trends in bookings and room nights, those sound nicely ahead of where Street estimates are for the whole quarter. Is there any reason to think that you won't continue to build from April in terms of kind of thinking about monthly comps or anything else we should keep in mind, you know, pull forward or pent-up demand? Secondly, helpful color on the revenue take rates and the EBITDA impact from timing. I guess, how do we think about that as we work into next year? Should take rates, at least kind of like for like, accommodation normalize to 2019 levels next year?
Does that EBITDA headwind of a few points on timing, does all of that unwind, do you think as we get into 2023? Any help you can give us on the kind of margins and how they progress further would be great. Thanks.
Hi, Lloyd. Why don't I take that first one? I'll let David go back over the timing issues that you just asked about. Your question really is trying to predict the future, which is always an interesting adventure, particularly over the last couple of years that we've all gone through. As I've said and David was saying, we are very pleased with where we are. We're happy with what's happening. I think everybody around the world is happy about travel coming back. We've mentioned how some of the trends that we like seeing in Asia, where things are getting better. We know they're not as good as they are in Europe or in the U.S. That's a good positive sign. Hopefully, that will continue.
We're also pleased with the things that we've been saying throughout in Europe, Western Europe and Eastern Europe playing back a bit. We're all very happy where we are, but we never know. We never know what's going to happen. You know, we've done this. We had a call, our last call, and then there was this terrible news shortly thereafter what happened in Ukraine. If you recall going back a quarter before that when Omicron came out of nowhere. We all know that the world is, let's say, volatile right now. I will say I am happy where we are and I'm pleased with the incredible good job of execution our team has done. David, I'm not sure you want to do any more color than that.
Yeah. Glenn, just maybe a couple extra points on what we're seeing in April and March. I mean, we did see a steady progression from that first week in March where things were -10% up through March and April on a fairly steady basis, week-on-week. As Glenn said, there's still a lot out there in the environment that's hard to predict. I would comment that Easter happened in April in both periods, so Easter effect, you know, relative to the growth rates versus 2019 or versus 2021 for that matter either.
Relative to the longer term take rates, as I explained on the call, take rates are, the impact timing on take rates is a mathematical impact of the difference between the amount that you spill into the year from the prior year and the amount you spill out the current year into the next year. Of course, that can be variable based upon effects. We saw it this year. We said that there was a purge in Q1 on timing effects on take rates because that's when Omicron basically came up at the end of Q4, and that resulted in less bookings spilling into Q1 than we would expect. It 's really a function of how the recovery develops in total in terms of how rapidly things recover and also just the timing of that recovery.
As growth rates start to normalize and get back to kind of more normal levels, you'd expect the impact upon the take rates, the timing impact on take rates to come down, but then there could be some additional factors that could impact those specific things relative to what happens about the prior Q4s going into Q1 and the next Q4s going into the future Q1. Normally, as the growth rates start to normalize and also revenue growth rates and booking growth rates start to align more, there will be less effect, but there could still be unusual effects like what we've seen before that could impact the specific timing of the Q1, Q4 and the relative difference between those quarters across the years.
Okay. Well, thanks for helping explain that.
Our next question comes from Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley. You may now state your question.
Great. Thanks for taking my questions, guys. I have two. First one, David, I think last quarter you talked about some like shape of the year comments. You talked about marketing and percentage of gross bookings being a little higher than it was in 2019, et cetera, and sales and other expenses and sort of thoughts about that as earnings and bookings. Yeah, I know there's a lot of pieces with ADRs moving around, et cetera, but can you just sort of maybe tell us your latest thoughts about some of those metrics on marketing spend for the year and sales and other for the year, however you wanna kinda help us think about it a little bit? Then, Glenn, good to hear about traction you're making on payments and flights, et cetera.
I guess, talk to us about on the Connected Trip front, which of the initiatives you think is most likely to really have a meaningful impact on the P&L as soon as maybe 2023 from an incremental dollar perspective? Thanks.
David, do you want to do that first one?
Yeah, Brian, let me go first. With the exception of the mechanical movements, I'll talk about how they impact things a little bit. The mechanical movements started to mature out, which are basically just P&L geography movements. We're not changing what we said last time. We do expect some deleverage in marketing to gross bookings for the year. We said we expected in Q1 to be relatively flat. We were a little bit better than that. We're actually at 50 basis points ahead in Q1 due to higher ROIs, but we did say we'd be leaning into the busy travel season more in Q2, Q3. We're still expecting to see some level of a deleverage during the year and also increase the spending on merchandising.
Sales and other, we still expect that to be up about 50 basis points for the year. That's tied to payments. The mechanics of the major adjustment with moving those additional expenses into sales and other would be less than 10 bps of a further adjustment. Again, that's to TGB. Essentially, with the exception of the mechanical movements, what we talked about a quarter ago about how we see the year shaping up, we still expect to see the year shaping up the same way.
Of course, I've given you some additional color on take rates we didn't provide last quarter, so that gives you a little bit more color than we gave a quarter ago because we now know what happened in Q1, so we can give you a bit more guidance around that.
Brian, talking about Connected Trip. Connected Trip is a long-term vision, and it's gonna take some time before we get to where I believe we need to be in terms of a truly step-function change from the way people are currently buying, exploring, going through travel. I think we all know how difficult it is, and we all know that it should be better. That's the goal down the road. In 2023, we're still gonna be pretty early in this. I think we're still in the base level of just getting great verticals up and running so that they by themselves are fantastic, good product for people to use. Just the basic cross-selling things that, you know, we think is a first step to get towards a Connected Trip.
You asked what are the biggest things for 2023? Well, the things I've just talked about right now, flights right now, I really like the fact that we have new customers coming in, and they're coming in and buying a meaningful number of buyer accommodations, and we haven't optimized this yet. That's something important. On top of that, I mentioned in my prepared remarks about just beginning small experiments with other types of verticals and how putting these things together can give a better experience to a customer. The great thing about these things is trying to build up a belief that coming to us, to Booking.com, is the best way to go. Getting more repeat business and getting to do it on the app so that we don't pay for that person to come and increase that loyalty.
There's a lot of ways trying to increase this flywheel so people know the product is better and come to us. As we continue to do that, get more information, able to provide a better proposal to them, a better offer to them that they convert more easily and it continues to build on its own. It's gonna take time, though, and in 2023, I don't think you're gonna see huge numbers from all the things I just talked about, but you will see incremental improvement.
Great. That's helpful. Thank you all.
Our next question comes from Kevin Kopelman from Cowen. Your line is now open.
Great. Thanks a lot. I was hoping to just dig in a little bit more on the April trends. The improvement of nights there at a 10% is obviously a big acceleration. Could you, what exactly are you seeing there in terms of changes? If we relate that back to your ad spend, you had some leverage versus TGB in Q1, but you're spending more in Q2. How much of that is a reaction to what you're seeing versus strategically pulling on the lever in the start of Q2? Thanks.
Let me talk a bit, and Kevin, I'd actually like to talk in terms of any sort of numbers, levers or whatever. Yeah, we are very pleased with what we're seeing. I believe there's a culmination of many things that we're working on. It's really is a game of execution in the small details, making sure we're working with partners and getting the right price, the right inventory, and then it's making sure we're showing it to the customer at the right time in the right way. It means also doing these we're talking about with alternative accommodations, bringing in a few, you know, bringing some incremental more supply there, making sure we're working to come up with ways that it works better so that the customers have a better experience and the payments are more smooth, et cetera.
I know there's a lot of little things that we're working on. Each one builds on its own and makes it a better experience. Now, yes, we have a brand effort in the U.S. You hopefully remember from our Super Bowl I believe a very good ad, and we're continuing this. This is not just a one and done. It's a campaign, and we tied that with some efforts in social, and we're doing a lot of different things to try and increase our awareness, getting that top of mind awareness in the U.S., for example, how we build that. This is a global effort really in terms of trying to build our business by doing all the little things that make it a better product. Because in the long run, the better product is what's going to win.
David, I don't know if you want to speak anything specific in terms of, you know, ROIs or levers or anything of that nature.
Actually, Brian, I'll go where you went because this is just not one geography. We're seeing all geographies improve in April, which for us is very encouraging. We mentioned that, you know, Europe is now in April back into high teens growth versus 2019. That is, really encouraging and really, the first time we've been able to talk about, you know, growth over 2019 in Europe. This is for room nights. U.S., that's very strong growth versus 2019, which we think is well ahead of the market, and Glenn mentioned some of the factors. APAC recovering nicely, down, you know, still down, but you know, down high teens. That's again, the best result we've seen, since the start of pandemic.
The rest of the world back up to double digits. All nice improvements from Q1, all nice improvements from March. It's not just one region we're seeing across the world, which I think is a positive sign. I mentioned that we would be leaning a little bit more in Q2 than in beginning Q1 relative to ad spend and ROIs. As we said, that is really in response to the opportunity to capture demand. When we see demand and we see traffic on the site, that's when we can start increasing our marketing spend. We're really responding to the opportunity of recovering travel. Once we see travel that's when we can lean in.
We start leaning in, typically through last year, you sort of see that in prior quarters. It's early during the quarter. That's why we said we expect it to be, you know, a small level of deal activity this quarter in marketing. The impact we're seeing and the change we're seeing from March to April is very positive.
Great. Could you touch on currency with the 30% GBV figure for April? Is that reported or constant currency? The dollar has strengthened since the last call, so I wanted to ask about that.
That's a reported number. You know, currency is an impact. For what it's worth, when we did our guidance and we did our calculations here, we had EUR 1.08 come down a little bit. It doesn't make a huge amount of difference, but the numbers we gave you all are reported. Unless we call something out specifically as constant currency, for example, we call out constant currency ADRs, for example. Everything else is reported.
Thanks so much. Appreciate it.
Our next question comes from Justin Post from Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Great. Thank you. I guess I'm just trying to think about market share. Can you give us any indication of how much share U.S. nights were back in 2019 and what that looks like now? One question on take rates. I know your payments platform is handling 34% versus 13%. I would think that would be increasing your overall take rates, but you said take rates about flat. Just talk to maybe you can help us understand how the merchant business is affecting take rates. Thank you.
Dave, why don't you take that? I wanna turn my team back on. How about that?
Yeah, I talked about. When we talk about the underlying take rates, we're talking about the basic take rate on the commission on the room. We're not factoring payments to that at all, or merchant mix. As I said, the biggest impact on take rate is timing, and we've talked about it being very significant. You are right. We are getting an increase in the overall take rate from our mix towards payments and from the fact that we get additional revenue from payments. As I mentioned in 2021, for example, you know, that was somewhat offset by the merchandising that we can now do, because we couldn't merchandise and participate in pricing actions ourselves, until we have our payments platform.
In 2022, that again will be largely offset by the merchandising activities. Now bear in mind, merchandising is also why in marketing we can turn something up and turn it down. We think that this year in a recovering travel marketplace, there's a potentially once in a generational opportunity to really lean into both marketing and merchandising. We are seeing improvements in take rates from the payments platform. Again, the number, when I talk about the underlying accommodation take rate being very constant, that does not include the additions for things like payments or things we do on top of payments, nor does it impact anything that we do on top of that or does include anything we do on top of that with our merchandising activity. Hopefully that clarifies movement there.
Great. On U.S. share of nights, any help there?
David, I think we don't reveal that, as a matter of competitive priority.
I think our view, Justin, being that, you know, share data is, you know, I think we should look at share over a medium-term basis. You know, a single quarter, very difficult to predict. You know, we certainly believe that last year, with our growth in the U.S. being strong versus 2019, we certainly recovered a lot faster than the market did in 2021. You know, we were strong again in Q1 in the U.S. market versus 2019, and very strong in April. You know, difficult to give you individual share points, but when we look at the overall accommodation market, which is the way to think about things, we know we fixed some share points in 2021, and we know we are continuing to stay above where the market is in 2022 from a recovery point of view.
Yeah. Thank you.
I would say, look, I am very pleased with what we've done over the last two and a half years since this pandemic started, what we've been doing in building out our business in the U.S. I made the point how important it was strategically to do better in the U.S. because we had been under-indexed in the U.S. We've been doing a lot of market activity over these two and a half years in the midst of this pandemic. We're beginning to see it come through, and I'm very pleased with the results up to Q1.
Great. Thanks, Glenn. Thanks, David.
Our next question comes from Mark Mahaney from Evercore. Your line is now open.
Maybe Mark's line's not open.
Mr. Mark Mahaney?
Hey, sorry about that. I'm here. Sorry about that. David, a question for you and then one for Glenn. David, you talked about take rates this year being I think just below 15% or something like that, and you said they'd be a few points higher if not for timing. I wanna ask you is, does that mean that, you know, once we get beyond these unusual timing issues for a variety of factors this year, that kind of the normalized take rate is a couple points higher, like 17%? You haven't done that. Booking has done that in the past, but that's going back, you know, five, six, seven years. I s that the implication of that statement?
Then Glenn, about the Connected Trip, I wondered if you think that there's something that's structurally changed that makes Connected Trip more attractive, more viable or more impactful than it has been historically. I think about the history of online travel, and there was a Connected Trip company, but they never went with, you know, large package business, but they never generated as many room nights as you did, and you were, you know, very solo, you know, lodging company. Is there something that's changed now, maybe it's much greater use of mobile or mobile apps that just makes, you know, the Connected Trip a greater, you know, needle mover today than it was historically? Thanks a lot.
Yeah. Mark, why don't you go first?
You want me to go first? Mark, here's the thing. I have to know, over two decades, people have been talking about a Connected Trip because travel has been this problem, you know, since we started buying travel online and not a human being booked for us. Certainly the technological landscape has changed significantly since we first started building this, when I first joined this company in 2000. Now we have so many new things that we can use to make this better. The idea of mobile apps. E ven more so, all the machine learning AI to be able to do better types of predictability of what's happening, what could be better for a person, how we can see is there a potential problem in the future, we can fix it before it happens. So many things.
I believe this can be done, will be done, and we're the ones who are gonna do it, okay? We're not there yet. To say it hasn't happened, it hasn't happened yet because we haven't built all this yet. I believe it will happen, and I do believe it's necessary because I don't believe that people should have to suffer the way they do right now in trying to do a simple family trip. That being said, though, it's going to take time. We're gonna get there, but we're not gonna show up, next quarter or next year and say, "Here's the incredible increase in our business." It's gonna be incremental, it's gonna take time, but I absolutely believe this is where it's gonna be in day-by-day user years.
Yeah, right. Thank you, Mark. Yeah, let's not confuse the difference between impact on EBITDA margin and actual take rates, take rate percentages. What we talked about is the fact that. Let's go back to the numbers. In 2019 the take rates blended across the year was 15.6%. In 2021 we said it was 14.3%. We said last quarter it'd be somewhere between those two. This quarter we gave you a bit more guidance because we know more about the timing impact in Q1, so we said just below 15%. We said that the timing impact on take rates was causing a few points of EBITDA margin compression. You know, take a few.
We said last quarter and we still maintain that our EBITDA margin rate for the year will be a few points higher than it was in 2021. We said after last quarter, we're clarifying again today, that if it wasn't for the impact of timing, the EBITDA margin will be a few points higher again on a normalized basis. The fact that take rates are being hurt for the full year is causing us to have a few points of compression on our EBITDA margin this year, which is timing related. We did not take rates into account in 2017, and we said that they would be below 15%. If you know, normalize from just below 15% back to 15.6%, something like that, then that will give you those few points of EBITDA margin that we talked about.
Okay. Yeah. Sorry, that was my mistake on the confusion.
No problem.
Thanks. Thanks, David. Thank you, Glenn.
We will now take our next question. Comes from Eric Sheridan of Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Thank you for taking the question. I wanna come back to the comment you made in the prepared remarks on investing in supply. As we go deeper into 2022, can you talk about what kind of investments you feel you need to make? Also, as you look at the base of gross bookings and the booking window you have now deeper into the year, where do you find yourself with elements of supply-demand imbalance on either the shared accommodation side or the hotel side that you're trying to sort of unlock or think about, not only just for summer of 2022, but beyond into 2023? Thank you.
Sure. Let me talk a little bit about trying to build our supply in areas where we think we need it. I've talked about this in the past in the alternative accommodations area, where we think we are not as well-positioned as some of our competitors, to state the fact, particularly in the U.S. We absolutely need to go out and first make sure we got a product that people who own properties wanna put on our platform. That's kind of the new things I talked about, you know, in terms of the liability insurance, in terms of a payment system that is actually workable and works well, things like that. You have to make people aware of this, and that's going out. We mentioned we have a new campaign out. We're spending money. It's more than just, you know, marketing.
There's actually individuals talking with the big owners of multiple properties to make sure they understand what we can bring to them. That's how we start to bring in more of that, because if you don't have the supply, you're never gonna be gaining any business. We do that, and then the obvious, the second, the other side of this two-sided marketplace, make sure consumers are aware of this too, and make sure they're coming to it. That's how we're going to do this over time. It's honestly something that I've talked about for a long time. I'm sure people are getting a little tired of me saying it, but it's, this is where we're going. I mentioned how we did have a net increase in alternative accommodations.
We're pleased about that. We are gonna keep on building this. It builds on itself. This is, again, one of those things where it's like a snowball. You need to get it rolling, and then it will build more and more and faster and faster. It's gonna take some time. I'm pleased with where it is. In terms of the window, I mean, repeat that part of the question.
I'm just kinda curious, like, where you do see supply-demand imbalances based on what you've seen in the forward booking window going into the summer and other elements of this, where maybe there are disconnects in supply versus demand by product type looking out deeper into the year.
Yeah. Right now, we're not seeing any shortage of supply from demand, people coming in. It's not so that they can't find any additional rates right now. That doesn't mean in peak summer that there won't be some shortages of inventory. In fact, that happens every normal year when there's, you know, peak summer travel in the Northern Hemisphere, where the most popular places will fill up and the most popular properties in those popular locations are gonna fill up. One of the great things that we've been doing for some time is being very flexible in offering customers, when they come in and we're not having enough inventory, we think consumers are still up there, we're offering alternative places they can go and stay or different, you know, different locations, different properties, all different ways.
We are doing this and working on different experiments to do that. We're not the only ones who do that. That's important. If you have a customer in your store you wanna sell, but you don't have enough of what they want, you show them something else that probably is just like it. That's what we're doing. Clearly over time, what I wanna do, though, is not have to have this conversation about the U.S., that we don't have enough of the single properties on the beach and X, Y, Z. That's not really what we're working on. Right now, I don't see an issue right now with having insufficient supply.
Great. Thanks for all the color, Glenn.
We will now take our last question, comes from Doug Anmuth from JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. I just wanted to ask about international recovery themes. Like you're suggesting it's coming more from short haul. Just curious what you're seeing in terms of long haul and how you're thinking about that coming back. Thanks.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah.
Go on. I'll start. Sorry. You're right. International recovery in total for international booking and in total for cross-border as we define it in April down a little bit. Short haul within Europe actually up decently, but long haul still down, not too surprisingly. I mean, in total to see the international booking number close to flat for April I think is a great step forward. Not surprisingly, inter-region is gonna recover fast, fastest. You know, most European countries have now relaxed all restrictions for travelers within Europe, which is great. Long haul still down, but also rapidly improving. You know, we see strong growth in travelers from the U.S., for example. Obviously travel into and from Asia is still down. That's an important destination for both U.S. and European people when you look at long haul routes.
Maybe basically similar to what you said. Basically, we have a situation that's very tied somewhat to restrictions. It is countries that are typical long haul destinations, some of them in Asia, for example, as they'll begin to lighten up and people feel more confident they can go without having to do a lot of different things, don't have to quarantine before, don't have to go to get a test there, don't test before, as these things go away, then people will travel more and more on these long haul trips. I definitely am positive on the continued trend in this area.
Great. Thank you both.
Okay. Was that the final question?
Yes, that is our final question, so I will now turn the call back to Glenn Fogel for the closing remarks. Please go ahead.
All right. Thank you. As always, look, I wanna thank our partners, but I really wanna thank all of our partners who have generously contributed to our refugee platform. Also, of course, wanna thank the customers, our dedicated employees, and our shareholders. We appreciate your support as we continue to build on the long-term vision for our company. Thank you all, and good night.
Thank you, and that concludes today's conference call. Thank you everyone for participating. You may now disconnect.