In Brief: Hotel guest satisfaction in North America has reached its highest level in years, with improvements recorded across every major aspect of the guest experience. At the same time, new J.D. Power research suggests artificial intelligence is beginning to influence how travelers discover and evaluate hotels, signaling another shift in the industry’s competitive landscape.
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The Ritz-Carlton took the top spot in the luxury segment for the second consecutive year. Pictured The Ritz-Carlton, Lake Tahoe – Image Credit AXIS Architecture + Design
By HNR News Staff Reporter
Hotel guest satisfaction in North America has reached its highest level in years, with improvements recorded across every major aspect of the guest experience. At the same time, new J.D. Power research suggests artificial intelligence is beginning to influence how travelers discover and evaluate hotels, signaling another shift in the industry’s competitive landscape.
Hotel operators across North America are seeing the results of years of investment in property upgrades, staff training and guest experience initiatives, according to the J.D. Power 2026 North America Hotel Guest Satisfaction Index Study. The latest findings show guest satisfaction improving across every hotel segment and every stage of the hotel experience, reflecting an industry that has largely recovered from the operational challenges that followed the pandemic years.
The annual study, now celebrating its 30th year, provides one of the hospitality industry’s most closely watched benchmarks for guest satisfaction. This year’s results indicate that hotels are not only maintaining service standards despite higher operating costs but are also delivering measurable improvements that guests recognize.
Guest Experience Improves Across the Board
Overall guest satisfaction increased 13 points to 665 on J.D. Power’s 1,000-point scale, with gains recorded across every measured category.
The greatest improvements were seen in guests’ perceptions of value for the price paid, followed by food and beverage offerings and overall hotel facilities. These gains are particularly significant because they occurred while average daily room rates in the United States continued to edge higher, increasing by approximately one percent year over year.
For hotel owners and operators, the findings suggest that travelers remain willing to pay higher room rates when they perceive tangible improvements in quality, service and amenities. Rather than focusing solely on price, guests appear increasingly willing to reward hotels that consistently deliver a better overall experience.
Operations Are Driving Satisfaction
Much of the improvement stems from operational fundamentals rather than headline-grabbing innovations.
According to J.D. Power, guests reported better experiences through:
- More courteous and professional front desk staff
- Faster responses to guest requests
- Better maintained public spaces
- Improved swimming pools and fitness facilities
- Higher-quality food and beverage offerings
- Enhanced guest rooms
These results reinforce a long-standing principle within hospitality: investments in people and property often produce stronger guest loyalty than short-term promotional strategies.
As labor markets have gradually stabilized and many hotel companies have restored staffing levels, service consistency appears to be improving across much of the industry. At the same time, many brands have continued renovation programs that were delayed during the pandemic, resulting in refreshed guestrooms and upgraded common areas.
Guest Expectations Continue to Evolve
While service remains the foundation of guest satisfaction, the study also illustrates how guest expectations continue to shift.
Technology features that were once viewed as premium amenities are rapidly becoming standard requirements. Smart televisions capable of streaming personal content are now available in nearly three-quarters of hotel guestrooms, while guest usage continues to climb.
Health and wellness also remain high priorities for travelers. Daily housekeeping, once scaled back by many hotels during the pandemic, continues to rank among guests’ most desired amenities. Travelers also increasingly value filtered water stations and well-equipped fitness centers, reflecting broader consumer interest in wellness during travel.
For hotel operators, the message is clear: competitive differentiation increasingly comes from executing the basics exceptionally well while ensuring that expected amenities are consistently available.
Artificial Intelligence Enters the Booking Journey
Perhaps the most forward-looking finding in this year’s study is the emergence of artificial intelligence in the hotel research process.
While traditional online travel agencies, search engines and hotel websites remain dominant, AI-powered research tools are beginning to influence how travelers identify and compare accommodations before booking.
The study found that AI usage is currently concentrated among younger travelers. Nearly half of guests who use AI during hotel research are Millennials (Gen Y), while nearly one-quarter are members of Gen Z.
Although AI-assisted hotel discovery remains in its early stages, the trend mirrors broader changes already occurring across travel planning. Increasing numbers of consumers are turning to conversational AI platforms to ask for personalized recommendations rather than relying solely on keyword searches or browsing dozens of booking pages.
For hotels, this shift introduces a new visibility challenge. Success may increasingly depend not only on search engine optimization and online reviews but also on how effectively hotel information is structured, distributed and understood by AI systems that generate travel recommendations.
A New Competitive Landscape
The findings arrive as the hospitality industry faces a changing digital marketplace.
As AI becomes another layer between travelers and hotel brands, visibility is likely to become as important as reputation. Hotels that provide clear, consistent and authoritative online information may gain an advantage as AI tools increasingly summarize destinations, compare properties and recommend accommodations.
This does not diminish the importance of guest satisfaction—if anything, it reinforces it. Positive reviews, strong operational performance and consistently high guest experiences provide the signals that both travelers and AI systems increasingly rely upon.
The Industry’s Next Challenge
Thirty years of J.D. Power data demonstrate that guest expectations never remain static.
Today’s improvements in service quality, facility maintenance and operational execution have lifted satisfaction scores across the industry. Yet the next phase of competition may depend on something else: ensuring hotels are discoverable in an AI-driven travel-planning environment while continuing to deliver the experiences guests expect once they arrive.
For hotel operators, the message is twofold. Continue investing in the fundamentals that drive satisfaction, while preparing for a future in which the path to booking increasingly begins with an AI-generated recommendation rather than a traditional search engine.












