This is likely to be one of the most remote—and extreme—Airbnbs in the world. You land in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia's capital, hop in a propeller plane to the Taiga forest of northern Mongolia, and trade flight for a 4x4 once you arrive at the forest's edge. Then, when the roads disappear, you're met not with horses, but with reindeer, which will cart you three hours to your final destination: an Airbnb tepee with your hosts, Otgonbayar and Zorigt, members of the nomadic Dukha tribe.

A stay in the basic tepee comes with everything you'd expect: two wooden beds with sleeping bags, and an open-fire stove for you to cook your three daily meals (which'll be noodles and meat, according to the home's listing). Plus, the hosts say you'll get "full access to our backyard, the Taiga forest." What it won't have? Bathrooms. You're living a nomadic life, following reindeer, after all.

Thanks to the new partnership, staying in remote locations in Mongolia—like this one, with the Dukha tribe—will now be possible. Courtesy Airbnb

Before, well, today, you'd have had a hard time even finding the Dukha nomads—let alone spending the night in their portable home. The tribe moves through the Taiga forest with its reindeer, following the moss the herd snacks on every few weeks, setting up tepees as needed. "It is very hard for tourists to find us, and for us to explain the location when we have limited mobile network access. We have to explain the address as 'pass those mountains... and then pass the river,'" the hosts said in a press release. But now, thanks to a new partnership with mapping start-up What3Words, Mongolian Airbnb hosts—yes, even the nomadic ones—can tell you where to find them amid the country's steppe and forests.

Instead of relying on road-based addresses (which are hard to come by in areas where there aren't any roads), What3Words divides the world into 57 trillion 10-foot-by-10-foot squares, each assigned three nouns to represent their location. (For example, Otgonbayar and Zorigt's Airbnb location earlier this year was "evaluate.video.nails.") It means that rural areas, or even specific entrances to large buildings, can have their own three-word address. The company uses a map, which also works offline, to help people more specifically locate themselves and others. Mongolia has always been a leader with the technology, accepting What3Words addresses for mail delivery as early as 2016. Now, even Mongolia's central bank and Pizza Huts acknowledge the modern addresses, and Lonely Planet lists the three-word addresses in its most recent Mongolia guidebook.