The hospitality industry is investing heavily in technology, data, and automation – but many hotel teams still feel like progress isn’t translating into real operational impact. While systems are more advanced than ever, fragmented data and manual workarounds continue to slow decision-making and strain already stretched teams.
Based on insights from leading hotel owners and operators, The 2026 Hotel Operations Index examines how hotels are modernizing today, where progress is stalling, and why foundational challenges – like integration gaps and data fragmentation – are becoming the biggest barriers to efficiency, scalability, and AI readiness.
52% of respondents say the industry is making progress “slowly but steadily,” yet only 11% report having a fully integrated technology stack
91% still rely on some level of manual reporting, even within automated workflows
Just 15% are very confident in the accuracy and timeliness of their operational data
Most hoteliers believe the industry is moving forward, but confidence remains low. While more than half describe progress as steady, only 2% believe the industry is “already there,” signaling a widespread sense that modernization is incomplete and uneven.
Fragmentation remains a defining operational challenge. Twenty-seven percent of respondents rely on more than seven technology platforms to run their hotels, and 27% spend more than 11 hours per week consolidating or reconciling data. These disconnected systems quietly drain time, increase labor costs, and erode trust in reporting.
Interest in AI is growing, but readiness is limited. Only 25% of respondents say they are ready to adopt AI, while 40% say they are not ready at all. Rather than guest-facing chatbots, hoteliers identified predictive demand modeling and cross-department data collaboration as the highest-value AI use cases – underscoring the need for stronger data foundations before AI can deliver real ROI.