You built the website. You put up the rooms, the rates, the beautiful photography. Guests arrive — Google Analytics confirms it. And yet the bookings are not coming through at the rate they should be.
Before you rebuild the site, change your booking engine, or cut your rates, you need a diagnosis. Throwing money at a website problem without knowing its source is how hotels waste thousands of pounds on solutions to the wrong problem.
This guide gives you a systematic way to find exactly where your hotel website is losing guests — using data, behavioural tools, and a structured audit framework.
A conversion problem cannot be diagnosed without a benchmark. The first step is to establish what your current conversion rate actually is.
Direct booking conversion rate = completed direct reservations ÷ total website sessions × 100
The industry average for independent hotel websites is 1–3%. Well-optimised properties achieve 3–5% and above. Before you can diagnose, you need Google Analytics 4 installed with booking engine conversion events configured, Google Tag Manager managing your tracking, and UTM parameters on all paid media and email links.
Not all traffic converts equally. In GA4, break down your conversion rate by traffic source: organic search, direct, paid media, email, and referral. If organic traffic converts at 2.5% but paid traffic converts at 0.3%, the problem is likely in your landing pages or message mismatch between your ad creative and what guests find when they arrive.
Segmenting by device is equally important. If mobile traffic converts at half the rate of desktop, your mobile experience is the problem — not the website overall.
In GA4, build a funnel exploration with these steps:
A high drop-off between steps 1 and 2 means guests are not engaging with the site enough to attempt booking — a content, design, or trust problem. A high drop-off between steps 3 and 5 means guests are entering the booking engine but abandoning before completion — a booking engine problem.
With funnel data telling you where guests are leaving, use page-level data to identify which specific pages are contributing to drop-off. In GA4, look at engagement rate by landing page, scroll depth, and exit rate by page.
Pair this with behavioural tools. Hotjar and Microsoft Clarity provide heatmaps, scroll maps, and session recordings — you can watch a guest reach the booking engine, encounter a problem with the date picker, and leave.
Work through this checklist:
Independent hotels must earn the trust that OTAs receive by default. Review your site for trust signal gaps:
Two technical issues consistently suppress hotel website conversion: slow page speed and broken mobile experience.
Page speed: Run your site through Google PageSpeed Insights. Note your mobile score specifically — Google uses mobile-first indexing, so your mobile speed affects both your conversion rate and your organic search rankings. A score below 70 on mobile indicates a problem.
Mobile experience: Open your website on your own phone and attempt to complete a booking as a guest would. The gap between the desktop experience and the mobile experience is often significant — and since over 60% of hotel website traffic arrives on mobile, it represents a majority of your conversion problem.
Once you have worked through these six steps, prioritise fixes in order of impact: booking engine friction first, then mobile experience, landing page and message match, trust signals, page speed, and analytics setup.
At The Lobby, we offer a free hotel website review that works through exactly this diagnostic framework — and tells you, specifically, where your site is losing bookings.
Get your free website review →
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 audits hotel websites and identifies exactly what’s stopping visitors from booking direct.