In Brief: A shift is being observed in the hotel industry as they experiment with a new approach, transitioning from treating individuals as guests to considering them as members, aiming to foster a sense of belonging and increase customer retention.
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From Guests to Members: Hotels Test a New Hospitality Model – Image Credit HNR News
Hotels are increasingly adopting membership-based access models that extend beyond overnight stays, signaling a shift toward recurring, relationship-driven hospitality rather than purely transactional room revenue.
Published March 26, 2026 | By HNR News Staff Reporter
Membership Moves Into the Hotel Model
The traditional hotel business is built on nightly transactions. That model is now being challenged as operators experiment with memberships that monetize access to space, services, and community rather than just rooms.
What began as a niche concept in private clubs is now moving into the broader hospitality landscape. Hotels are introducing membership tiers that provide access to lounges, coworking areas, wellness facilities, and curated social environments—often independent of an overnight stay.
The shift reflects a fundamental question for the industry: can hotels build lasting customer relationships rather than relying primarily on one-time bookings?
From Guest to Member
Membership changes the nature of the customer relationship. Instead of a guest who checks in and out, the hotel is engaging with a member who interacts with the property on a more continuous basis.
This creates a different economic model. Memberships introduce recurring revenue, but more importantly, they create repeat engagement with the asset itself. The hotel becomes a place people use regularly, not just occasionally.
That distinction is critical. It shifts hospitality closer to models seen in fitness, coworking, and private clubs, where ongoing access and community drive value.
Real Examples Are Expanding
The model is already established in some segments. Soho House operates entirely on a membership basis, blending hospitality, workspace, and social space into a single platform.
More recently, lifestyle-focused operators such as Ennismore, backed by Accor, have incorporated club-style environments and member-oriented programming into their hotel concepts.
Traditional hotel brands are also testing elements of the model. Hyatt and Marriott International have expanded flexible-use spaces, day-access offerings, and community-driven environments that move closer to a membership-style experience.
As Skift noted in a recent analysis, “hotels are increasingly being designed as multi-use environments that serve both guests and local communities,” a shift that supports the expansion of membership-driven access models.
Control of Space Becomes a Strategic Lever
Membership models also change how hotels control and prioritize space. Instead of allocating public areas purely for transient guests, operators can designate certain environments for members, creating a layered access structure within the property.
This introduces both opportunity and risk. Exclusive spaces can enhance perceived value, but they can also create friction if hotel guests feel displaced or restricted.
The balance between member access and guest experience becomes a critical operational decision.
Scalability Is the Open Question
While the model is gaining traction, its scalability remains uncertain. Membership-driven hospitality tends to perform best in dense urban markets with strong local demand and a consistent base of potential users.
In secondary cities or resort destinations, where usage is more seasonal or transient, maintaining sufficient member engagement may be more challenging.
There is also the question of brand fit. Not every hotel brand is positioned to operate as a club, and poorly executed membership programs risk diluting identity rather than strengthening it.
Outlook
The expansion of membership models suggests that hotels are exploring a different kind of value proposition—one based on access, frequency, and relationship rather than purely on occupancy.
If successful, this approach could reshape how hotel assets are used and monetized, turning properties into ongoing platforms rather than occasional destinations.
For now, the model remains uneven and market-specific. But the direction is clear: the hotel of the future may not just check guests in. It may sign members up.


