Fashion

7 Vogue Editors on the Dream Airbnbs They Have Wishlisted

Book our wishlist.

By Elliot O·May 18, 2026·2 min read
7 Vogue Editors on the Dream Airbnbs They Have Wishlisted

Reported by Vogue.

There is a particular kind of person who has seventeen browser tabs open at any given moment — half of them runway looks, the rest vacation rentals they will absolutely, definitely book someday. Vogue editors, it turns out, are exactly those people. According to Vogue, the same instinct that drives their fashion wishlists governs their travel ones, resulting in a running collection of dream Airbnbs that spans continents, climates, and every conceivable aesthetic mood.

The properties are as varied as the editors who bookmarked them. Kiana Murden, beauty shopping editor, has her heart set on a sun-drenched two-bedroom in Paris — walkable to the Marais, sixth-floor walkup and all. Elly Leavitt, lifestyle shopping editor, has spent years trying to lock down Faros Villa on the Greek island of Serifos: a one-bedroom carved into clifftop stone, with azure shutters, an Aegean-view terrace, and the kind of handbuilt bed that makes you reconsider your entire living situation. Meanwhile, Concetta Ciarlo, beauty shopping writer, has her eye on a sprawling Condesa townhouse in Mexico City — three bedrooms, a private sauna, and enough architectural drama to justify finally making the trip.

Somewhere Between a Mood Board and a Boarding Pass

Stateside, the picks lean into romance and regionalism. Associate commerce producer Alex Ditch returned from a family trip to Nantucket genuinely changed by a cedar-shingled historic home — custom millwork, Matouk linens, antique furniture — later discovering it was designed by New York interior designer Samuel Masters. Shopping market editor Andrea Zendejas chose a converted barn on a working farm in Ipswich, Massachusetts for her sister's intimate elopement: orchards, wandering goats, and proximity to Crane Beach, with a Little Women filming location thrown in for good measure. And associate commerce producer Fred Sahai, a Canadian with a lifelong pull toward the American desert, has a pink mid-century house in Morongo Valley earmarked for a Joshua Tree weekend involving books, a negroni, and a mountain sunset.

What ties all of it together isn't a price point or a destination — it's intention. These aren't random pins on a map. They're places chosen the way a great outfit is chosen: for feeling, for detail, for the story they tell before you've even arrived. The Serifos terrace. The Nantucket millwork. The Condesa sauna. Every edit is a point of view.

Your travel wishlist deserves the same curation you give your wardrobe — because where you stay is just another form of dressing for the life you actually want.


Read the original at Vogue.

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