App-only hotels run nearly without staff. Check-in via app. Room key via app. Service requests via app. Some travelers love it. Others find it cold.
The properties
citizenM
Boutique-budget category. Strong design. App-driven check-in. Limited human staff. Good for one-night business stops.
Yotel
Airport-adjacent and city-center properties. Tech-driven. Smaller rooms with smart features.
Sonder
Apartment-hotel hybrid. App-only check-in. No human staff at most properties.
Marriott Element and Hilton Tru
Brand-new app-driven brands.
What works in app-only
Quick stops
One-night business stops, airport stays, late-night arrivals — app-only works well.
Frequent travelers
For travelers who don't need help, the app efficiency wins.
Tech-comfortable demographics
Younger and tech-comfortable travelers report higher satisfaction.
Cost
App-only properties are typically 30-50% less expensive than equivalent service-rich hotels.
What doesn't work
First-time international travelers
The friction is high if you need help.
Special occasions
Anniversaries, birthdays, proposals — humans matter.
Complex requests
Local recommendations, unusual problems, dietary handling — needs a human.
Older demographics
Service expectation higher, app friction higher.
Where the category is going
Most luxury chains are not moving toward app-only. The luxury market values the human service.
The growth is in the boutique-budget and select-service category — where app-only enables better economics.
Five rules
- App-only for short, simple stays
- Service-rich for long stays, special occasions, or complex itineraries
- Read app reviews before booking — varies wildly
- Backup plan — know what to do if app fails (it will, eventually)
- Pre-load the app before arrival — set up at the airport
For more, see the hotel tech pillar.