Contactless luxury is the right tech-luxury balance. The mechanics happen via app. The service happens through people.
What contactless luxury looks like
Pre-arrival
Check-in via app 24 hours before arrival. Room preferences logged. Arrival-time signaled. Concierge messaged for any special requests.
Arrival
Walk past front desk. Room key on phone. Room ready. Bags delivered.
In-room
Voice control of climate, lighting, blackout, music, TV. App-based room service ordering. Spa appointments via app.
Departure
Express checkout via app. Receipt emailed. No queue.
Where humans still appear
The doorman greets you. The concierge calls within an hour to ask about preferences. Housekeeping introduces themselves. The bartender knows your name by night two. The general manager sends a handwritten card.
The tech handles the friction. The humans handle the warmth.
The hotels
Marriott Luxury (Ritz-Carlton, St Regis, EDITION)
Mobile check-in across the portfolio. Mobile key in most properties.
Hilton Honors (Conrad, Waldorf Astoria)
Mobile check-in, mobile key, app-based service.
Hyatt (Park Hyatt)
App-based service across luxury brands.
IHG (InterContinental, Six Senses, Regent)
Mobile check-in, app-based service.
Independent luxury
Aman, Cheval Blanc, Belmond mostly maintain front-desk first. Concierge-call-after-arrival is universal.
What's worth using
Mobile check-in
Always. Saves 10-15 minutes at front desk.
Mobile key
Always. Eliminates lost-key drama.
App-based requests
Yes for routine. Use phone or in-person for complex.
Voice control
Worth learning. Take 5 minutes the first night to set preferences.
Express checkout
Always. The morning-departure queue is wasted time.
Five rules
- Mobile check-in always — saves 10-15 minutes
- Voice control day one — saves friction every day after
- Use the app for routine, the human for complex
- The tech doesn't replace the tip — staff still earn it
- Express checkout always — the queue is wasted time
For more, see the hotel tech pillar.