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Google Search Console for Hotels: How to Use Your Data to Drive More Direct Bookings

The Lobby > Analytics & Integrations > Google Search Console for Hotels: How to Use Your Data to Drive More Direct Bookings
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Google Search Console for Hotels: How to Use Your Data to Drive More Direct Bookings

Google Search Console is one of the most underused tools in hotel digital marketing. Most properties either have not verified their website, or they check it occasionally to see if there are “any errors”. Meanwhile, their GSC data contains a full picture of which keywords are driving organic traffic, which pages are ranking and converting, and exactly where their SEO strategy should focus next.

This guide covers how to set up and use Google Search Console for independent hotels — from initial verification to building a keyword opportunity pipeline from your own data.

What Google Search Console Shows You That GA4 Cannot

GA4 tells you what happens after a visitor arrives on your website. Search Console tells you what happened before — what they searched for, which result they saw, and whether they clicked it.

Specifically, GSC provides: the exact search queries that triggered your website to appear in Google results, the number of impressions (how many times your site appeared in search results), the number of clicks, your average position for each query, and which pages are ranking for which keywords.

This data is unavailable anywhere else. Google Analytics stopped providing keyword data in 2013. GSC is the only source of keyword-level organic search performance data for your hotel website.

Step 1: Set Up and Verify Google Search Console

  1. Go to search.google.com/search-console and sign in with your Google account
  2. Click “Add Property”
  3. Choose “Domain” property type (covers all subdomains and both http/https versions)
  4. Enter your domain (e.g., crownhotel.com — no www or https)
  5. Verify ownership using the DNS TXT record method (recommended) — add the TXT record to your domain registrar’s DNS settings

If you cannot access your DNS settings, use the HTML file or HTML tag verification method instead. Verification typically takes a few minutes to a few hours.

The 4 Core GSC Reports for Hotels

Report 1: Performance — Search Results

This is your most important report. Navigate to Performance → Search results. You will see total clicks, impressions, average CTR, and average position over your selected date range.

The most useful view: filter by Pages and identify your top 10 pages by impressions. For each page, switch to the Queries filter and see which specific keywords are driving impressions to that page. This tells you what Google thinks each page is about and which keywords you are almost ranking for.

→ Example: A coastal hotel checked their GSC Performance report and found their rooms page was appearing for the query “dog friendly hotel Cornwall” with 1,200 impressions per month but only 18 clicks — a 1.5% CTR. Their title tag made no mention of dog-friendly. Updating the title and meta description to include “dog-friendly rooms” raised CTR to 4.8% within 6 weeks, generating an additional 39 clicks per month from a keyword they were already ranking for.

Report 2: Coverage (Index Coverage)

Navigate to Indexing → Pages. This report shows which pages on your website Google has indexed, which it has excluded, and why. Key issues to look for:

  • Pages with “Discovered — currently not indexed”: Google knows the page exists but has not indexed it, often due to thin content or low priority signals
  • Pages with “Crawled — currently not indexed”: Google has seen the page but decided not to index it — almost always a content quality issue
  • Pages with “Duplicate without user-selected canonical”: multiple URLs with the same content are confusing Google about which version to rank

Report 3: Core Web Vitals

Navigate to Experience → Core Web Vitals. This report shows how your hotel website performs on Google’s page experience signals — Largest Contentful Paint (LCP), Interaction to Next Paint (INP), and Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS).

Pages failing Core Web Vitals are at a competitive disadvantage in Google rankings. Mobile performance is particularly important for hotel websites — most hotel searches happen on mobile and mobile Core Web Vitals scores are typically lower than desktop.

Report 4: Sitemaps

Navigate to Indexing → Sitemaps. Submit your XML sitemap URL (typically yourhotel.com/sitemap.xml or yourhotel.com/sitemap_index.xml). This tells Google which pages exist on your site and how frequently they are updated, helping ensure all your key pages are discovered and indexed promptly.

Finding Keyword Opportunities in Your Own Data

The highest-value keyword opportunities for most hotels are not brand new keywords — they are keywords where you already rank on page 1 but with a low click-through rate, or keywords where you rank on page 2 that could be pushed to page 1 with targeted optimisation.

Low CTR / High Impression Keywords

  1. In the Performance report, click “Average CTR” to sort by click-through rate
  2. Filter by Position less than 10 (page 1 rankings only)
  3. Sort by Impressions descending
  4. Keywords with more than 100 impressions and less than 3% CTR are your priority targets
  5. For each, check the page it leads to and improve the title tag and meta description to better match the search intent

Page 2 Rankings with Volume

  1. Filter by Position between 11 and 20
  2. Sort by Impressions descending
  3. Keywords ranking in positions 11–20 with more than 50 monthly impressions are within reach of page 1
  4. For each, review the ranking page’s content and identify gaps compared to top-ranking competitors

→ Example: A city hotel found 12 keywords in positions 11–18 with more than 100 monthly impressions. For 6 of them, their ranking page had less than 200 words of relevant content. After expanding those pages with 400–600 words of targeted content, 4 of the 6 keywords moved to page 1 within 3 months.

Setting Up GSC Alerts and Regular Reviews

Google Search Console sends email alerts when it detects manual actions, security issues, or significant drops in indexing. Make sure your alerts are going to an actively monitored email address — not a generic admin account that nobody checks.

For ongoing monitoring, set up a monthly GSC review as a fixed calendar appointment. Review: total click trend vs. previous period, any new coverage errors, Core Web Vitals changes, and your top 20 keywords by impressions with their CTR and position trends.

Multi-Property Hotels: Managing Multiple GSC Profiles

If you manage multiple hotel properties, each website needs its own Search Console property. There is no cross-property reporting in GSC itself — but you can import data from multiple GSC properties into a single Looker Studio dashboard to compare performance across your portfolio.

Ready to turn your Search Console data into a keyword and content strategy?

The Lobby analyses GSC data for independent hotels and builds SEO action plans from it.

Get Your Free Search Console Review


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