Lonely Planet sold to US digital marketing group for undisclosed sum

Travel guide publisher acquired by North Carolina-based Red Ventures

Lonely Planet: “No brand represents the magic of the modern explorer better.” Photograph: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg
Lonely Planet: “No brand represents the magic of the modern explorer better.” Photograph: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Travel guide publisher Lonely Planet has been acquired by US digital marketing group Red Ventures for an undisclosed sum.

North Carolina-based Red Ventures said it had acquired Lonely Planet from its current owner NC2 Media and was aiming to propel it into the digital era while “remaining committed to publishing the guidebooks that have made Lonely Planet the iconic brand it is today”.

Red Ventures owns and operates several other digital brands and just recently acquired tech news website CNET for $500 million from ViacomCBS.

The terms of its deal were not disclosed.

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‘Magic’ of travel

Red Ventures said Lonely Planet had produced over 150 million travel guidebooks, reaches 186 million people annually and covers 22,000 destinations around the world.

"While the travel industry is experiencing an unprecedented downturn, we believe it will come back stronger than ever, and no brand represents the magic of the modern explorer better than Lonely Planet," Red Ventures co-founder and chief executive Ric Elias said.

Office closures

The relatively unknown NC2 purchased Lonely Planet from the BBC in 2013 for £51.5 million (€56 million).

As the pandemic hit in March and April, Lonely Planet announced office closures and redundancies across the group, including several at its Dublin office. While the company said it would continue publishing its country guidebooks, it cut back several ancillary services.

The swift action was, according to the company, “about ensuring Lonely Planet can continue in a much-changed industry”.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times