Is AI going to make hotel websites obsolete?
17 experts shared their view
There are two major developments in AI that are directly affecting hospitality and particularly hotel websites:
- AI Search bots pull only 25% of AI answers from hotel website content (VertoDigital), All of the generic hotel information, descriptions of services and amenities the AI Agent platforms have already scraped from publicly available information about the hotel on the Internet or from proprietary databases.
- Agentic AI does not need websites for information or to make a booking. To access hotel ARI (Availability, Rates and Inventory), Personal AI Agents will communicate directly via APIs with the hotel cloud PMS, CRS, Channel Manager, the future hotel's own AI Agent, or via MCR middleware or APIs with the OTAs. Agentic AI in hospitality is a type of AI that makes autonomous travel decisions and performs specific tasks and goals, from travel planning, research of locations, amenities and rates, to actual booking of the hotel and all other travel components and auxiliaries to make their master's trip a success.
In the near future, the Personal AI Agents will have the option to research, plan and book travel by making a "handshake" with the newly emerged hotel own AI Agent, or with the OTA's own AI Agent. If hoteliers do not provide the option, the only choice will be the OTA Agent.
Some experts believe that, in the not so distant future, Agentic AI and AI Agent platforms will make hotel websites and mobile apps completely obsolete since AI does not need hotel websites for information or ARI.
The question is, Is AI going to make hotel websites obsolete and if yes, when?
The rapid advancement of AI, especially agentic technologies, is fundamentally changing hotel distribution and guest engagement. Recent data shows that only about 25% of AI-generated hotel information now comes from hotel websites; the rest is sourced from OTAs, public databases, and proprietary data. With the rise of agentic AI, personal digital agents will increasingly bypass traditional websites, connecting directly to hotels' systems via APIs to access availability, rates, and inventory, or to make bookings. This shift is already underway among major vendors and OTAs.
However, declaring websites obsolete is premature. Adoption of AI-ready infrastructure remains uneven, and hotel websites still play a vital role in branding, storytelling, and handling complex transactions or regulatory needs. The challenge for hoteliers isn't whether websites will fade away, but how to evolve them—with structured, machine-readable content and open integrations—to remain competitive in an AI-first landscape.
In short: as commerce shifts toward machine-to-machine transactions, the relevance of classic hotel websites will diminish, but adaptable, AI-ready digital assets will remain crucial. Now's the time for hotels to future-proof both their websites and core technology to stay ahead in this new ecosystem.
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