Expert Views (6)

Bold prediction: The PMS isn't going anywhere by 2030 — but it will look nothing like it does today. It becomes the heart of the hotel, connecting and coordinating most AI tools, agents and decisions running across the property. We are already moving toward a world where a guest's AI assistant and a hotel's system can talk to each other — booking, personalising, transacting — with potentially no OTA or brand booking engine involved. That makes data ownership critical. Operators who hold accurate insights that are actionable will have an advantage. Revenue management and marketing could for the most part run themselves — MEWS acquiring Atomize is an early signal. The potential threat to major brands is real, distribution, loyalty and proprietary technology were the value proposition, and all three are being impacted. The winners will be operators who can move quickly without the handcuffs of dated brand technology. But none of this matters if the industry forgets what it is actually here for — the experience has to match what the guest paid and what the brand promised them. AI will disrupt this industry but at the luxury end, people will continue to deliver great guest experience.

The death of the PMS was mooted back in 2014 when I joined hospitality from airlines. 14 years later, we still have PMSes. Their primary all-in-one functions were:

-         Handle check-in/out

-         Manage room key cutting

-         Take payments

-         Set up the hotel room inventory and types

-         Assign a price per room

-         Link to selling channels like OTAs

-         Manage housekeeping

-         Manage facilities management/maintenance

-         Handle on-site events

Separate RMSes now do pricing and push rates to PMSes. CRSes/CMs do distribution. FM systems handle complex estates. M&E systems do events. CRMs do guest experience. Golf/leisure/spa systems have always stayed separate. POS is separate but tends to be twinned with a PMS, as F&B is so core to the guest experience. All linked via APIs. The functional “define my hotel” features will still live in a PMS, but that’s about all.

I see a resurgence of the “service bus” (SB) concept with plug-in/out of partner services. Oracle’s OHIP is this. “Good enough” modules aren’t good enough. Swap your POS to get better vendor pricing. Swap M&E to boost space monetisation. Swap payment gateways for better rates. Add a spa? Plug in a new spa tool. “Agentic AI” adds little to the mix. SBs are already messaging hubs.  

The Enterprise PMS will still be around in 2030. Every hotel needs a system of record to manage reservations, inventory, rates, guest profiles, financial transactions, and operational controls. AI doesn't remove that requirement. If anything, it makes having a reliable source of truth even more important.

What will change is how people interact with the PMS. Staff will spend less time navigating screens and more time using AI-powered assistants and automation to complete tasks. That said, I think some of the industry discussion overstates the level of disruption. API-first platforms, integrations, and external applications consuming PMS data are not new concepts. Most large hotel groups are already moving in that direction today.

The real opportunity is not replacing the PMS, but making it more open, connected, and intelligent. By 2030, the PMS may be less visible to hotel staff, but it will remain one of the most critical systems in the hotel technology ecosystem. AI will sit on top of it, not replace it.

The Property Management System will continue to remain important to hotels to sell and manage the core product - the room inventory. However, as we have all experienced, the PMS has grown and evolved over the decades from this core purpose to also become a Central Reservation System and a CRM / Guest Profile system. In time, as technology evolves, these features will be taken on by specialized systems (indeed a trend we already see unfolding), and by 2030, the PMS may be back where it started - managing the room inventory and working with other systems and agents that manage the guest profile, distribution connectivity and various other things that hotels need to do to serve guests effectively. It will be critical in such a scenario to have a PMS with open APIs and robust data structures that can easily interface with other systems and agents as this landscape evolves. Hotel staff may increasingly rely on intelligent assistants trained to understand the user and the brand / company / hotel with the PMS (and all the other systems) serving as engines underneath.

The enterprise PMS survives to 2030, but unrecognizable. It hardens into a unified, real-time data core and sheds the screens staff use today. The record matters more: agents cannot act on stale data. Assistants become the interface; a smaller team steers the agents. The PMS goes invisible, like electricity, but becomes an operating system in role, the control plane every agent runs on. Distribution comes home as PMS, CRS, and channel manager collapse into one real-time core.

The customer is changing too. With AI-run companies already being floated, agents will soon transact on their own, and a PMS that only assists humans is already behind.

Whether the PMS survives is one question. Whether the incumbents at HITEC survive is another. The wildcard is frontier AI. Anthropic now reports its AI writes most of its code, and systems handling week-long tasks arrive by 2027. When what took twenty years and a million edge cases becomes buildable in months, the moat was never the software. It was the data, the trust, and the integrations. Those survive. Feature lists do not.

The 2030 PMS won't be software you use. It will be an engine in the background, freeing people to serve the guest.

The enterprise PMS will still exist in 2030, but it will no longer be the application where hotel employees spend most of their time. Instead, it will evolve into a transaction and orchestration engine at the center of a broader hospitality technology ecosystem.

The PMS will remain the system of record for reservations, inventory, folios and guest stays, while AI assistants become the primary user interface. Front desk agents, revenue managers and operations teams will increasingly interact with conversational AI that executes actions across multiple systems. By 2030, many of these roles may be partially or fully represented by AI agents rather than people. The industry will move from human-to-system interactions toward AI-to-AI collaboration, where autonomous agents coordinate guest requests, pricing decisions, housekeeping, maintenance and operational workflows in real time. Humans will focus on oversight, exceptions and strategic decisions.

At the same time, PMS platforms will expand beyond guest transactions into operational optimization through integration with smart room technologies, energy management and occupancy intelligence.

The most successful PMS providers will transform from Property Management Systems into Hospitality Operating Systems, combining guest intelligence, operational data and AI-driven decision making. Ironically, by becoming less visible to users, the PMS may become more important than ever.