There is a difference between a hotel website that looks impressive and one that converts. The gap between the two is user experience — the way a guest moves through your site, the decisions they make or avoid, the friction they encounter or don’t.
UX is not about aesthetics. It is about behaviour. It is about designing a journey that guides a motivated guest from their first impression to a completed booking with as little resistance as possible. For independent hotels competing against OTAs with teams of conversion specialists and millions of pounds in optimisation research, getting UX right is one of the most accessible competitive advantages available.
These eight changes are not theoretical. They are the specific, evidence-backed improvements that move conversion rates from the industry average of 1–3% towards the 3–5%+ that well-optimised independent hotel websites achieve.
Most hotel websites have a booking button somewhere. The best hotel websites make the booking CTA the most visually dominant element on every page — impossible to overlook, impossible to confuse with anything else.
Colour contrast is the primary tool. Your booking button should stand out from the page background and from every other interactive element on the page. If your brand palette is neutral — whites, creams, soft greys — your CTA button should be in a contrasting colour that appears nowhere else on the page.
Copy matters as much as colour. “Book Now” outperforms “Click Here”. “Check Availability” outperforms “Explore”. “Book Direct and Save” outperforms everything if you offer a direct booking incentive — because it answers the question a guest is silently asking: why shouldn’t I just go back to Booking.com?
The CTA should appear above the fold on every page, repeat after any substantial content section, and persist as the guest scrolls — a sticky header or floating button ensures it is always reachable. On mobile, the primary CTA should be visible within the first screen without any scrolling required.
Every item in your navigation menu is a decision. Every decision a guest has to make is an opportunity to choose the wrong thing — or to choose nothing and leave.
Most hotel websites have too many navigation items. A boutique property does not need fourteen top-level pages. It needs five or six, clearly labelled, covering the things guests actually look for: rooms, dining, experiences or spa, location, and a direct booking entry point.
Review your navigation with this test: if a guest lands on your homepage with the intention of booking a room for next weekend, can they find everything they need within two clicks, without the navigation sending them down an irrelevant path?
Drop-down menus with multiple sub-items add visual noise and decision load. For most independent hotels, a flat, simple navigation structure with a prominently placed booking button converts better than a comprehensive site map dressed up as a menu.
On mobile, the navigation should collapse into a clean hamburger menu with no more than five or six items. Test it with your thumb. If any item requires precise tapping, it needs to be larger.
Any page on your website can be the entry point for a guest arriving from Google search, a paid ad, or an email campaign. This means every page — not just the homepage — needs to function as a standalone conversion experience.
A guest who arrives on your spa page from a Google search for “hotel spa weekend in [city]” should immediately see: what the spa experience is like, what makes it worth staying for, and a clear CTA to book. They should not need to navigate back to the homepage to understand the property or find a booking button.
The practical implication is that every page needs four elements: a clear headline that communicates what the page is about, imagery or content that builds desire, enough context to orient a first-time visitor, and a prominent CTA. This is equally true for room pages, dining pages, local area guides, and blog articles.
For paid media, this discipline is non-negotiable. Google Quality Score — which determines your cost per click — is partly determined by the relevance of the landing page to the ad. A bespoke landing page for a specific campaign (a summer offer, a Christmas package, a spa promotion) will always outperform the homepage for paid traffic, both in conversion rate and in advertising efficiency.
Guests scanning a hotel website page are not reading in order from top to bottom. They are jumping to the most visually prominent elements — large images, bold headlines, contrasting buttons — and using those anchors to decide whether to engage further.
Visual hierarchy is the practice of using size, weight, contrast, and spacing to make the most important elements the most visually dominant. On a room page, that hierarchy should be: photography first (largest, most prominent), key room details second (clear, scannable), price and CTA third (high contrast, immediately findable).
Common visual hierarchy failures on hotel websites include:
F-pattern and Z-pattern eye-tracking research shows that guests tend to scan horizontally across the top of a page, then vertically down the left side, then across again at points of visual interest. Design your page layouts to place the most important information at the points where eyes naturally land.
Independent hotels ask guests to make a significant financial commitment — often hundreds of pounds — to a property they have never visited, paying a brand they may not have heard of before. Trust must be built progressively throughout the guest journey, not inserted as an afterthought at the payment screen.
Trust signals by page:
For email marketing, trust extends into the inbox. Pre-arrival emails that are warm, informative, and on-brand reinforce the booking decision and reduce cancellations. A guest who feels taken care of before they arrive is less likely to change their mind.
Every field a guest has to complete, every page they have to load, every decision they have to make is friction. Friction reduces completion rates. The goal of UX is not to build a more elaborate journey — it is to remove everything that stands between the guest and the booking.
Practical friction reduction:
Measure form abandonment in GA4. If guests are reaching your booking engine and leaving during the input process, friction in the form itself is likely the cause.
UX on a desktop and UX on a mobile are not the same problem. A layout that works beautifully at 1440 pixels can be unusable at 390. And since over 60% of hotel website traffic arrives on mobile, the mobile experience is the experience for most of your guests.
Mobile-first UX means designing the entire journey around the smallest screen, then scaling up for larger devices — not the reverse.
The specific UX challenges of mobile hotel websites:
Test the complete booking journey on a real phone before launch and after any significant site update. The difference between what you see in a browser’s responsive mode and what a guest experiences on a device is often significant.
UX is not a one-time project. It is an ongoing discipline. The hotel websites that achieve and sustain high direct booking conversion rates are the ones with teams that monitor performance regularly, test changes methodically, and use data to make decisions rather than assumptions.
The measurement foundation:
With this infrastructure in place, you can identify underperforming pages, test specific changes (a new CTA, a different homepage headline, a reordered room page layout), and measure the impact of each improvement in direct booking terms.
The compound effect of incremental UX improvements — each one small, the cumulative result significant — is how independent hotels consistently close the conversion gap with OTAs.
At The Lobby, we design and optimise hotel websites built around how guests actually behave — combining UX expertise with conversion strategy and digital marketing to grow direct bookings.
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The Lobby is a hospitality digital marketing agency working with independent hotels and restaurants across Europe. We combine SEO, paid media, and website strategy to grow direct revenue.
The Lobby designs hotel websites with UX best practices at the core — turning visitors into direct bookers.