AeyoScout is a pre-booking checker. You point us at a listing or a destination, tell us a little about your trip, and we return a short, structured briefing of what may be worth knowing before you book.
Paste a Booking.com URL or search by hotel name. If you don't have a link yet, we can help you find the property and bring the URL back when you're ready. Or skip listings entirely and explore a destination, such as a city, neighborhood, or town.
Currently supports Booking.com listings.
Your dates, your party, and what you care about, such as cleanliness, fees, noise, walkability, weather, or healthcare access. Add any specifics in plain English (allergies, mobility needs, kids' ages, a past travel issue). We use that context to sharpen what we look at.
We cross-check public data and the listing's own information, then structure it into one briefing of concerns to consider. Depending on the location, the briefing may consider:
The briefing surfaces concerns to consider. It does not guarantee the safety, accuracy, availability, or suitability of any listing, destination, or trip. We're conservative on purpose. We'd rather flag something you can confirm with the platform, host, or official sources than oversell a property. Always verify important details directly with the booking platform, host, official sources, and your own judgment before you book.
We want you to know how a briefing is put together so you can weigh it sensibly. Here is the short version.
Many people ask whether an area is "safe." We do not answer that with a crime score, on purpose. Public crime data is often incomplete, reported inconsistently between places, and easy to read the wrong way, and neighborhood scoring tends to lean on demographic proxies that do not belong in a travel tool. Instead we surface practical signals you can act on, such as walkability, how built up the area is, and how far the nearest hospital or pharmacy sits.
Weather uses live forecasts for near dates and long run climate normals for planning further out. Environmental context (flood, wildfire, hurricane history, earthquake) comes from public datasets that update on their own slow cycles, so it reflects the most recent published data rather than today's conditions. Nearby places such as hospitals and pharmacies are looked up at the time your briefing is prepared.
Coverage is strongest for locations in the United States, where the public environmental and weather sources are richest. Some signals are limited or unavailable outside that coverage, and a briefing will say so rather than guess. A briefing is a starting point for your own checking, not a replacement for it.