A recent University of Houston report on robots in hospitality claims that by 2030 over a quarter of hospitality jobs will be replaced by robots. Will robots ever replace all humans in hospitality? Next-gen technology will undoubtedly replace mundane, repetitive, and dangerous jobs in hospitality performed by housekeepers, porters and baggage handlers, concierges, security guards, line cooks, room service, bartenders, waiters, etc. Some hoteliers claim that hospitality is an industry of "people serving people" and robots will be playing only a marginal role. Others, citing the high labor costs which constitute as much as 50%-84% of overall hotel costs in these low travel demand, low occupancies era, predict that robots will replace humans in all dangerous, repetitive and mundane jobs at the property.

The question is, are robots coming to a hotel near you anytime soon? 

Micah Green
Micah Green
CEO & Founder | Maidbot

Robots ARE coming to a hotel near you (and very soon).  The 2020's are for robotics just like personal computing in the 1970's and 1980's and the internet in the 1990's. Given the combination of labor issues being at an all-time high, technology cost being at an all-time low, and societies growing openness to adopt robotics and artificial intelligence technologies, robotics will hit every industry - including hospitality. Robotics have traditionally been implemented in factories and warehouses, but they are already expanding into hospitality applications - from serving at restaurants to cleaning hotel floors. 

There is a misconception that robots replace humans. In reality, there are huge labor shortages, deemed a 'labor crisis' by many in the industry, which has created massive challenges for operators. At the end of 2019, AHLA reported there were nearly 1,000,000 open roles in hospitality in the US alone. During COVID, the industry has been suffering even more as many associates found roles in other industries (ie. Amazon distribution centers) or retired. With this trend, the labor gap will continue to grow creating an even bigger hurdle for operators to overcome. 

That said, robotics have reached a point of technological and financial feasibility to help bridge the labor gap. The cost of solutions has gone down in the prior years allowing robotics companies to offer solutions that provide real value with real returns of operators. Although we still have several years until we get to Rosie the Robot from The Jetsons (my vision and dream), robots are getting deployed at a new scale.

2020 completely changed the world and had a tremendous impact on hospitality. With these massive challenges the industry face, come big opportunities to shift in powerful ways - including implementing robotics. 

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