In Brief: The rise of AI-driven search and advertising is rapidly changing the effectiveness and strategies of hotel paid media, with declining click-through rates, increased zero-click searches, and a shift in advertising power from Google to Meta, requiring hoteliers to adapt their digital marketing approaches for continued success.
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AI Reshapes Hotel Paid Media as Click-Through Rates Plummet – Image Credit Unsplash
The AI Shift in Hotel Paid Advertising
The hotel industry is experiencing a significant transformation in digital marketing due to the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in search and advertising platforms. As AI-driven tools like Google’s AI Overviews and Meta’s Advantage+ reshape the online landscape, traditional paid media strategies are becoming less effective. Hoteliers are facing lower click-through rates (CTR), a surge in zero-click searches, and a need to reconsider how they allocate their advertising budgets. This article examines the latest data, platform changes, and actionable steps for hotels navigating the AI age of paid advertising.
The Decline of Click-Through Rates and the Rise of Zero-Click Searches
Recent data shows a sharp decline in CTR for hotel ads, especially where AI-generated content appears in search results. According to Seer Interactive, CTR on queries with Google’s AI Overviews dropped by 68% from the baseline. Paid CTR fell from 19.7% in June 2024 to just 6.34% by September 2025. The trend is even more pronounced on mobile devices, where zero-click rates have reached 77%, compared to 47% on desktop. This means that most users are getting the information they need directly from AI summaries without ever clicking through to hotel websites or ads.
Despite the drop in clicks, the cost per click (CPC) for hotels has not decreased. As organic search space shrinks, more advertisers are competing for fewer available placements, driving up costs. This dynamic is forcing hoteliers to reconsider the value of their paid media investments, as impressions remain high but actual engagement and bookings decline.
Meta Overtakes Google: Shifting Advertising Power
A major shift is occurring as Meta (Facebook and Instagram) is projected to surpass Google in global ad revenue by 2026, with forecasts of $243 billion for Meta versus $239 billion for Google. Meta’s ad revenue growth is accelerating at 24.1%, while Google’s is slowing to 11.9%. This change reflects the growing influence of AI-powered personalization on social platforms, where travelers increasingly validate hotel recommendations and make booking decisions.
Meta’s AI tools, such as Advantage+ and Dynamic Travel Ads, are automating audience targeting and retargeting with higher efficiency. Advantage+ campaigns now average a $4.52 return for every $1 spent, about 22% higher than manually managed campaigns. Dynamic Travel Ads retarget users with specific room types they previously viewed, increasing the likelihood of conversion.
Google Advertising: AI Overviews and Performance Max
Google has integrated AI deeply into its ad products, shifting from keyword-based to intent-based advertising. AI Overviews now appear on about 13% of U.S. desktop queries, particularly for longer, conversational searches. When these overviews are present, paid CTR drops by more than 50%. As a result, traditional broad match keyword campaigns are becoming less effective for hotels.
Google’s Performance Max (PMax) and AI Max with Smart Bidding are fully automated, using AI to optimize campaigns across Search, Display, YouTube, Maps, Gmail, and Discover. While these tools can increase conversions—by 18% in unique search query categories and 19% overall—they require a high volume of conversion data to perform optimally. Smaller hotels with fewer conversions may see inflated return on ad spend (ROAS) numbers due to the inclusion of branded searches that would have converted without advertising.
Google’s generative AI tools are also being used to create and test ad creatives, headlines, and images. However, these should be used as a starting point, with human oversight to maintain brand voice and accuracy.
Programmatic and Display Advertising: Opportunities and Challenges
AI is improving programmatic advertising by enabling Dynamic Creative Optimization (DCO), which tailors ads based on user behavior, weather, local events, and other data. DCO has increased CTR by an average of 32% and reduced cost per acquisition by 30% compared to traditional display ads.
However, a major challenge is that AI research leaves no digital footprints. Guests who use AI assistants like ChatGPT for hotel research do not generate cookies or behavioral data, making them invisible to programmatic targeting. As a result, programmatic display budgets are under pressure to justify their returns, and display advertising is shifting toward retention and remarketing rather than prospecting.
Attribution and Measurement Challenges in the AI Era
AI-driven research and booking journeys are creating significant attribution problems for hotel marketers. Traditional tracking tools cannot capture the influence of AI tools, resulting in many bookings being attributed solely to the last-click channel, such as Google Brand Search, while ignoring the role of AI, social media, and other platforms in the decision-making process. This leads to overinvestment in channels that close bookings and underinvestment in those that generate initial interest.
To address this, hotels should move from last-click to data-driven attribution models and monitor direct traffic trends, which may indicate increased AI-driven recommendations.
The Future of Paid Media in an AI-Driven World
AI platforms are expected to introduce more paid placements as they seek to monetize their infrastructure investments. ChatGPT launched its self-serve advertising platform in May 2026, and Google is testing ads within AI Overviews and AI Mode, which now reach over 2 billion monthly users. The format of paid placements is shifting from traditional banner ads to integrated, conversational recommendations within AI tools.
For hotels, this means focusing on improving review volume, structured data quality, and bid strategy, as well as ensuring their websites are optimized for AI-driven discovery. The ability to be machine-readable and AI-ready will be crucial for future paid placements.
Conclusion: Adapting Hotel Marketing to the AI Age
The hotel industry has previously adapted to major changes in paid media with the arrival of Google Search ads and social media advertising. The current shift toward AI-driven advertising represents another major transition. Hotels that quickly adjust their strategies to leverage new AI tools, attribution models, and data-driven approaches will be better positioned to capture bookings and revenue in the evolving digital landscape. The window for early adoption is open, but it may close quickly as AI platforms mature and competition increases.
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