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Hotel Email Subject Lines That Actually Get Opened (With Real Examples)

The Lobby > Email Marketing > Hotel Email Subject Lines That Actually Get Opened (With Real Examples)
Hotel Email Subject Lines

Hotel Email Subject Lines That Actually Get Opened (With Real Examples)

The subject line is the most important sentence in any hotel email. It is the only thing your guest sees before deciding whether to open or delete. Every other element of your email — the offer, the photography, the copy, the call to action — is irrelevant if the subject line fails to earn the open.

This guide covers the principles behind high-performing hotel email subject lines, the most common mistakes that kill open rates, a comprehensive set of real examples organised by campaign type, and a practical framework for A/B testing that will improve your results over time.

47% of email recipients open based on the subject line alone — 69% report email as spam based on the subject line alone
The subject line works in both directions. A strong subject line drives opens. A weak, misleading, or promotional-feeling subject line actively drives spam reports — far more damaging to deliverability than unsubscribes.

1. The Six Principles of High-Performing Hotel Subject Lines

Principle 1: Specificity Over Generalisation

Vague subject lines train readers to ignore them. Specific subject lines create genuine interest because they signal that the content inside is real, particular, and relevant — not a generic message sent to everyone.

Vague (Low Performance) Specific (High Performance)
News from [Hotel] The dish our chef has been testing for three months — it’s finally on the menu
Special offer inside Your room is available for the Easter weekend — here’s what’s included
Summer at [Hotel] June at [Hotel]: what’s different this year and why it matters
Monthly newsletter Four things happening in [City] this October that most visitors miss

Principle 2: Relevance to the Recipient

The highest-performing subject lines signal that the email was written for this specific guest — referencing their stay history, their location, their occasion, or something genuinely specific to them.

  • Segment-specific language. Segmented by leisure vs. corporate: ‘Your weekend rate for [Month]’ vs. ‘Midweek availability for your next business trip’.
  • Name personalisation. Using the guest’s first name in the subject line adds 10–15% to open rates when used selectively. Overuse removes the effect.
  • Occasion or timing reference. ‘Your upcoming stay on Friday — what to expect’ is more relevant than ‘Your stay at [Hotel]’.

Principle 3: Genuine Curiosity Gaps

A curiosity gap is a question the subject line opens but does not answer. It works because the human brain is uncomfortable with incomplete information. The key word is ‘genuine’ — the gap must be answerable only by opening the email, and the content inside must deliver on the promise.

  • Story-based gaps. ‘The ingredient we nearly didn’t put on the menu’ — works because it implies a story the reader can only access by opening.
  • Insider knowledge gaps. ‘One thing most guests never know about [Hotel]’ — works if the reveal inside is genuinely interesting.
  • Change-based gaps. ‘What’s different about our rooms this winter’ — works if something genuinely has changed.

Curiosity gaps fail when the email inside does not deliver. Using a curiosity gap for a routine promotional email trains your list to distrust your subject lines permanently.

Principle 4: Urgency and Scarcity — Only When True

Urgency and scarcity are among the most powerful motivators in direct response marketing — and the most abused. Manufactured urgency destroys trust and reduces the effectiveness of genuine urgency when it arises.

  • True scarcity. ‘Only 3 rooms available for the June bank holiday weekend’ — effective because it is true and verifiable.
  • Real deadlines. ‘Last chance to book at our spring rate — offer ends this Sunday’ — effective when the deadline is real.
  • Exclusive access. ‘We’re releasing 8 rooms for the sold-out August weekend’ — signals genuine exclusivity.

Principle 5: Benefit Clarity

The clearest subject lines tell the reader exactly what they receive by opening — not what the hotel is doing, but what the guest gets.

Hotel-Centric (Lower Performance) Guest-Centric (Higher Performance)
We’ve launched our summer package What’s included in your summer stay — the details
New rooms available The room you’ve been waiting for — now bookable
Join our loyalty programme What our guest members get that regular bookings don’t
We’re hosting a wine dinner Six courses, one evening — here’s what to expect

Principle 6: Length and Emoji Use

On mobile devices — where over 55% of hotel emails are opened — subject lines are truncated at 30–40 characters. The most important information must appear in the first 30 characters. Keep subject lines under 40 characters for mobile-dominant lists, 40–60 for desktop-dominant (corporate) audiences. Avoid ALL CAPS, multiple exclamation marks, and words like ‘FREE’ or ‘SALE’ — these trigger spam filters.

2. Subject Line Examples by Campaign Type

Pre-Arrival Emails

Pre-arrival emails have the highest open rates of any hotel email type — typically 55–70% — because guests are actively thinking about their upcoming stay. The subject line should signal preparation, anticipation, or exclusive insider information.

Example Subject Line Why It Works
Everything you need for Friday — directions, parking, and one local secret Practical + curiosity gap. Signals value beyond a generic reminder.
Your room is ready early — here’s what to expect on arrival Implies a genuine benefit before opening.
Three things happening in [City] this weekend you shouldn’t miss Positions hotel as local expert. Relevant to the specific stay.
A note from the team before your stay on [Date] Personal tone. Suggests a genuine, non-automated communication.
We noticed it’s a special occasion — a quick note Highly relevant for celebration bookings. Drives opens from curiosity.
Your table at [Restaurant] is confirmed for Friday — a few things to know Specific and practical. Relevant to guests with dining reservations.

Post-Stay Review Requests

Post-stay emails should arrive within 24 hours of check-out. The subject line must be brief, personal, and direct — this is not the place for creative flourishes.

Example Subject Line Why It Works
One question about your stay, [First Name] Personal, brief, minimal friction — the gold standard for review requests.
Thank you for staying — a quick favour Warm and reciprocal. ‘Favour’ framing converts well.
How was your stay last week, [First Name]? Specific timing reference makes it feel timely rather than automated.
We’d love your honest feedback — two minutes Transparency about time commitment reduces friction.

Win-Back and Re-engagement Emails

Win-back emails target guests who have not returned in six months or more. The subject line must acknowledge the gap without being passive-aggressive, and give a genuine reason to re-engage.

Example Subject Line Why It Works
It’s been 14 months — here’s what’s changed at [Hotel] Specific time gap + concrete reason to return.
We’ve missed you — and we’ve been making changes Warm, honest, hints at a reason to come back.
[First Name], your room is waiting Personal, confident, not desperate.
Something is different at [Hotel] this year Curiosity gap — works if something genuinely has changed.

Seasonal Promotions and Demand Fill

Promotional subject lines work best when they lead with the destination or experience rather than the discount. Rate-led subject lines (‘20% off this January’) attract price-sensitive guests and train your list to wait for discounts.

Example Subject Line Why It Works
January in [City]: the best time to visit, and here’s why Destination-led. Reframes a slow period as a genuine benefit.
The rooms we keep for February — and why they’re better Curiosity + scarcity. Implies something worth discovering.
Six reasons October at [Hotel] beats summer List format. Specific and compelling.
We saved you a room for the March bank holiday Personified action. Implies the hotel is working for the guest.

Birthday and Anniversary Emails

Occasion emails have the highest click-to-open rates of any hotel email type. The subject line should arrive 10–14 days before the occasion and feel genuinely personal rather than automated.

Example Subject Line Why It Works
Your birthday is in two weeks — can we make it special? Direct, warm, appropriate timing.
A birthday treat just for you, [First Name] — opens in 14 days Countdown creates anticipation and urgency.
We noticed it’s coming up — a note from the team Deliberately vague. High curiosity gap for occasion emails.
The anniversary table you stayed at last year is available Specific memory reference. Highly personal feel.

Event Announcements

Event emails perform best when the subject line conveys scarcity, specificity, and social proof. Vague event subject lines are routinely ignored.

Example Subject Line Why It Works
14 seats. 6 courses. March 15th Ultra-specific scarcity. No filler words. High open rate.
Our wine dinner sold out last month — here’s the March date Social proof + scarcity. Works for events with a track record.
Private dining this Valentine’s Day — 4 tables remaining Scarcity + occasion + specific number. High urgency.
A summer evening at [Hotel] — 20 guests only Exclusivity framing. Positions event as genuinely select.

3. Subject Line A/B Testing: How to Do It Right

A/B testing subject lines is one of the highest-ROI activities in hotel email marketing. Most platforms support sending variant A to 20% of your list, variant B to another 20%, then automatically sending the winner to the remaining 60% based on open rate after 4 hours.

What to Test and in What Order

  1. Personalisation on vs. off. Add the guest’s first name to variant A, remove it from variant B. Test across 3–5 campaigns before drawing conclusions.
  2. Curiosity gap vs. benefit clarity. Test ‘The dish we nearly didn’t put on the menu’ against ‘What’s on our new autumn menu’. Learn which approach your audience responds to.
  3. Short vs. longer. Test a 35-character subject line against a 60-character one across the same campaign type. Mobile-heavy lists typically favour shorter.
  4. Urgency vs. value. Test ‘Only 4 rooms left for Easter’ against ‘What’s included in your Easter stay’. Scarcity drives opens; value drives clicks.
  5. Emoji vs. no emoji. A single emoji can drive measurable open rate improvement for some lists and no improvement for others. Test it — do not assume.

Testing Rules

  • One variable per test. Testing multiple elements simultaneously makes it impossible to identify what drove the result.
  • Minimum 3 campaign sample. Run each test across at least 3 campaigns before treating the result as a conclusion. Single-campaign tests are not statistically reliable.
  • Document everything. Keep a testing log — date, campaign type, variant A, variant B, open rate result, winner. This accumulates into a genuinely valuable reference document over 12 months.
  • Avoid anomalous periods. Do not test during major holidays or atypical periods. Anomalous conditions contaminate results.

4. Pre-Header Text: The Hidden Second Subject Line

The pre-header — the short preview text that appears beneath the subject line in most email clients — is the second most important piece of text in any hotel email and the most neglected. A well-written pre-header can add 5–10 percentage points to open rate. An empty or auto-generated pre-header (‘View this email in your browser…’) is a missed opportunity on every single send.

Subject Line Poor Pre-Header Strong Pre-Header
Your stay on Friday — what to expect View this email in your browser Directions, parking, and three things to do before you check in
Something is different at [Hotel] this year [Hotel] | Seasonal update We’ve refurbished the top floor. Here’s what it looks like now.
14 seats. 6 courses. March 15th Book now Last year’s dinner sold out in 48 hours. This year we have 14 seats.
One question about your stay, [First Name] [Hotel] guest feedback It takes two minutes and genuinely helps us improve.
Your birthday is in two weeks Happy Birthday from [Hotel] We’d like to offer you something. No strings — just a thank you.

5. Key Takeaways

Subject lines are not a cosmetic detail — they determine whether your email marketing programme generates revenue or disappears unread. The difference between a 20% and a 40% open rate on a list of 2,000 subscribers is the difference between 400 people reading your message and 800 people reading it. That difference compounds across every campaign you send for the lifetime of your programme.

  1. Be specific, not vague. Name the dish, the room, the date, the occasion. Generic subject lines generate generic results.
  2. Write for the recipient, not the hotel. What does the guest get? Lead with that.
  3. Use curiosity gaps genuinely. The content inside must deliver on the implicit promise of the subject line.
  4. Use urgency and scarcity only when true. Manufactured urgency destroys trust.
  5. Optimise for mobile — keep subject lines under 40 characters where possible and put the most important information first.
  6. Write a compelling pre-header. It is the second most important text in your email and the most neglected.
  7. A/B test systematically. Change one variable at a time, run tests across multiple campaigns, and document everything.

Want better open rates on every hotel email you send?

The Lobby writes, tests, and optimises hotel email campaigns for independent properties — from subject line strategy and A/B testing to full campaign management and automation.

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