Independent hotel Websites. Your hotel deserves better than a booking.com listing.
- Graeme Grant
- 5 days ago
- 4 min read

By Graeme , Codero Ltd · (4 min read)
If someone hears about your hotel through a friend, or spots it on Instagram, or reads a glowing review on TripAdvisor, where do they go next?
They Google you, and what they find in those first few seconds shapes whether they book direct, click away, or end up on Booking.com and hand you a 15–20% commission instead.
That moment....the one where a curious stranger becomes a paying guest happens on your website. Or it doesn't happen at all.
Yet for so many independent hotels, the website is an afterthought. A brochure left in the rain. Something that was built years ago, hasn't been touched since, and quietly leaks bookings every single day.
This piece is about why that matters, and what a proper website actually does for your property.
The OTA trap nobody talks about openly
Online travel agencies like Booking.com and Expedia have done something genuinely clever. They've made it easy to get rooms filled, and they've made it feel like that ease is worth the cost. But once you're reliant on them, stepping back is hard — and the commission fees quietly erode margins that smaller properties really can't afford to lose.
The good news is that most guests actually want to book direct. They'd rather talk to you, trust you, feel like they're getting the best deal. Your website is what makes that possible — or what gets in the way of it.
What a proper hotel website actually does
A good hotel website isn't just a digital version of your brochure. It's working for you around the clock, doing three things at once.
It builds trust before a single conversation happens
Guests booking a stay are making a real commitment — money, time, often a special occasion. Before they hand over card details, they want to feel sure. A website that looks dated, loads slowly, or has a clunky booking process doesn't just frustrate people — it genuinely undermines confidence in your property, regardless of how wonderful it actually is.
First impressions are visual, emotional, and almost instant.
A beautiful, considered website signals that you care about the details. And if you care about the details of your website, guests assume (correctly) that you care about the details of their stay.
It converts interest into bookings without the OTA middleman
Someone landing on your website is already interested. The job of the website is to answer their questions, remove their hesitations, and make it effortless to book.
That means clear room descriptions, honest photography, easy access to rates and availability, and a booking flow that doesn't make them want to give up halfway through!!
A well-built booking flow removes friction at every step not just a "book now" button, but the right information, in the right order, with trust signals exactly where doubt tends to creep in.
It helps new guests find you in the first place
Search engine optimisation isn't magic, and it isn't instant, but it is cumulative.
A hotel website built with SEO in mind gradually earns visibility for searches like "boutique hotel in [your town]" or "romantic weekend in [your region]." Those are high-intent searches from people actively planning a trip. Appearing there, with a website that earns their trust, is enormously valuable.
OTAs spend millions to rank for those same searches and take the booking fee. Your website can earn that traffic for free, over time, with no commission attached.
The honest truth about most hotel websites
They were built when the property first opened, or whenever a family member offered to help, and they haven't changed much since. They're slow on mobile. The photos are too small or too large. The booking button goes somewhere unexpected.
There's no clear reason to book direct rather than through an OTA.
None of that is a criticism, running a hotel is a full-time job, and websites feel like a problem for another day. But the cost of that delay is real, and it compounds.
Every guest who lands on a tired website and bounces to Booking.com instead is a booking you paid 18% for that could have been free.
What to look for in a hotel website
Whether you build it yourself, work with an agency, or explore something in between, a good hotel website needs a few non-negotiables:
-fast loading on mobile,
-professional photography used well,
-a seamless direct booking integration,
-clear communication of what makes your property special,
and the foundations of good SEO built in from the start.
It doesn't need to be the most beautiful website on the internet.
It needs to be trustworthy, clear, and easy to book through.
A note from me.
At Codero, I work exclusively with small independent hotels because I think you've been underserved, caught between expensive agencies who treat you as a small account and DIY tools that leave you to figure it all out alone.
I build websites designed specifically to grow direct bookings, and handle everything so you can focus on what you actually do: running a remarkable place to stay.
If your website isn't doing the job it should be, I'd love to have a no-pressure conversation about what that could look like.
Curious what a direct-booking-focused website could do for your property?
Get in touch with Codero .




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