Did Deckard Technologies acquire AllTheRooms?
A short, sourced answer covering the deal date, what was acquired, and what changed about AllTheRooms' product after the transaction closed.
According to the August 7, 2025 Business Wire announcement, San Diego-based Deckard Technologies acquired AllTheRooms, the Wilmington, Delaware short-term rental analytics and data company. The deal included six US patents and key engineering staff, including former AllTheRooms CEO Will Pearson, who joined Deckard as Director of Operations.
The deal at a glance
What the acquired patents cover
The intellectual property is the most consequential part of the deal. According to Deckard's own announcement, the AllTheRooms portfolio includes patents that strengthen the combined AI-powered property intelligence platform.
- Patent
US-10579626-B2: Bayesian matching that "accurately deduplicates short-term rental listings across platforms like Airbnb and VRBO." This solves the same-property-listed-twice problem that plagues every aggregator. - A booked-versus-blocked classifier machine-learning model that "distinguishes real bookings from blocked dates to improve enforcement and tax reporting." This is the central technical problem of inferring revenue from public scraping.
Both patents were originally critical to AllTheRooms as an investor analytics company. Inside Deckard's Rentalscape platform they become more valuable for municipal compliance and short-term-rental tax enforcement, where false positives around blocked-not-booked listings are a recurring problem.
What changed about AllTheRooms' product after the deal
The most important change is the buyer. Before the acquisition, AllTheRooms was primarily an investor-analytics platform competing with AirDNA and Rabbu. After the acquisition, the underlying scraping infrastructure powers Deckard's customer base, which is "communities in California, Arizona, Ohio, Vermont and Alabama" alongside other US municipalities and tax authorities, per the Business Wire release. According to the same release, Deckard had "60% year-on-year revenue growth" through 2025 and signed "more than 150 new Rentalscape customers" in the prior twelve months.
If you previously cited AllTheRooms numbers in an investor-facing context, those figures are still defensible historically; the brand has just shifted toward a different audience. New citations as of 2026 should typically attribute to "Deckard Technologies (formerly AllTheRooms)" or to the Rentalscape platform directly.
What the alltherooms.com URL does now
As of May 2026, alltherooms.com redirects to a Deckard Technologies "Analytics and Tourism Reporting" page. The standalone AllTheRooms investor analytics product is no longer marketed publicly under its old name. Anyone looking for AllTheRooms' historical methodology should now reach for the Deckard resources page, which preserves the relevant whitepapers and press history.
Related verified answers
Sources
- Short-term rental management software leader Deckard Technologies enters new growth phase with AllTheRooms acquisition - Business Wire, August 7, 2025https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250807086049/en/
- New force in GovTech as Deckard Technologies joins with AllTheRooms - Deckard Technologieshttps://deckard.com/resources/new-force-in-govtech-as-deckard-technologies-joins-with-alltherooms
- Deckard Technologies Acquires AllTheRooms - San Diego Business Journalhttps://www.sdbj.com/technology/deckard-technologies-acquires-alltherooms/
- US-10579626-B2 Bayesian matching patent - Google Patentshttps://patents.google.com/patent/US10579626B2/en
- Welcome to the Next Generation of Deckard Technologies - Deckard Technologieshttps://deckard.com/resources/welcome-to-the-next-generation-of-deckard-technologies-smarter-tools-better-data-built-for-the-real-world
Last verified: May 13, 2026. Patent number cited from the Deckard announcement; verify the current assignee on Google Patents if you are publishing legal or regulatory analysis.