The Boy Who Stayed in Bad Hotels
In 2012, Ritesh Agarwal was a 19-year-old from Titilagarh, Odisha — a small town most Indians couldn't place on a map. He had left home with ambition and very little else, and he was travelling across India staying in the kind of budget accommodation that most people endure rather than enjoy.
The experience was consistent: dirty rooms, broken promises, no standard pricing, no accountability. The same ₹500-a-night room could be a reasonable deal or a genuine ordeal — and you could never tell before you arrived.
He saw a technology problem masquerading as a hospitality problem. The hotels existed. The demand existed. What was missing was a layer that created standards, built trust, and made the experience predictable. He called his first attempt Oravel Stays. It was, in essence, a listings site. It was not enough.
The OYO Standard
The pivot to OYO Rooms in 2013 was more fundamental than a rebrand. Instead of listing hotels as they were, OYO would partner with them — install the technology, enforce the standards, train the staff, and co-brand the room. In return, OYO took a cut of the revenue and delivered demand.
The promise to the traveller was simple and radical: wherever you see an OYO, you know what you're getting. The room will be clean. The Wi-Fi will work. The price will be what the app said it was.
This was accepted into Y Combinator in 2015 — one of the few Indian startups to go through the programme. SoftBank's Masayoshi Son backed the vision with hundreds of millions. OYO expanded to 200 cities in India, then started looking beyond India's borders.
80 Countries, One Standard
Between 2018 and 2019, OYO became one of the fastest-expanding hospitality companies in history. It entered China, the UK, the USA, Indonesia, Japan, and dozens of other markets. At its peak, OYO was growing faster than any hotel chain had ever grown — not by building hotels but by standardising existing ones.
COVID brought the entire sector to a halt. OYO restructured aggressively, exited unprofitable markets, and refocused on unit economics. The painful rationalisation that followed was as important to the company's survival as its explosive growth phase had been to its ambition.
By 2026, OYO is in 80+ countries with over 1 million rooms under management. The IPO filed with SEBI reflects a company that has survived its adolescence and is now building toward sustainable scale. Ritesh Agarwal started at 19. The company he built is still young.

