Tell us about your people once — who needs a walk-in shower, who's six and allergic to dairy, which hotel in Lisbon you loved. Juno keeps it, uses it, and briefs the hotel before you arrive.
You're trying to book one trip for nine people — two grandparents, your sister's family, your own kids. One needs a walk-in shower. One is six and can't have dairy. You've had to split it across three separate bookings because nothing holds the group together. You've been at this since the kids went to bed, and tomorrow you're in meetings from 8am.
There should be a better way to do this. There is.
Tell Juno about your family once. It remembers the allergies, the accessibility needs, the bedtime routines, the hotel you loved in Puglia — and it reads between the lines of your old trips, so it knows you hate street-facing rooms even when you never said it.
Enter everyone once. Juno finds properties that fit the whole group — occupancy, accessibility, proximity, dietary — and books it in a single flow. No three checkout screens for one weekend.
Every hotel Juno books for you gets a brief on your family before you arrive — the walk-in shower, the cot, the dairy allergy, the early check-in. If anything changes on their side, Juno tells you and offers alternatives before the trip, not during it.
"Walk-in shower confirmed for Room 204. Dairy-free breakfast noted for Leo — chef has it on Friday's list. See you Friday."
Who's coming, who needs what, who's fussy about what. Takes about six minutes.
"My parents' 40th in September, somewhere in Italy, nine of us, three rooms."
Juno shows you 3–5 properties that actually work for everyone, with the reasons. You pick one. It books all the rooms together.
Juno briefs the hotel. If anything changes, Juno tells you before you pack — not when you check in.
"I booked my parents' 40th anniversary in twelve minutes at lunchtime. Nine people, three rooms, one of them with a walk-in shower for my mum, dairy-free breakfast for my son. I didn't have to re-type any of it the next time we travelled. That's the bit that actually changed my life."
"The brief came through a week before the family arrived. Connecting rooms, walk-in shower, cot in Room 4, dairy-free breakfast for the little one, and a note that the grandmother liked tea in the room on arrival. We had all of it ready. The guests never had to ask for a thing."
"Second trip was the shock. I typed three words and Juno already knew the kids, the allergy, the cot, the fact my husband hates hotel gyms. It felt less like booking and more like texting a friend who gets it."