Insights

New hotel checklist: 12 essential steps before opening your property

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The practical checklist to make sure your hotel is priced, bookable and ready to sell from day one.

Opening your independent hotel is exciting. But before your first guest walks through the door, there is one big question:

Are you commercially ready?

Many independent hoteliers start with spreadsheets, manual price checks and guesswork. In the first few months, they spend hours comparing rates on Booking.com, adjusting prices in Excel and reacting too slowly to demand changes. At the same time, confusing rate plans are deterring guests.

But that’s not all. OTA listings start to take off, with commissions eating into margins, while your own website lags behind. 

Before you go live, you need clarity on:

  • Who you are positioning your hotel for

  • How you structure your rooms and rate plans

  • How you price confidently

  • Where and how you distribute inventory

  • How you limit OTA commission costs

This practical checklist walks you through the essentials that directly impact your revenue and your time. If you can confidently tick off every section below, you’re ready for the big opening day with a solid strategy in place.

1. Define your hotel’s identity, positioning and value proposition

For an independent hotel, your own identity is a key asset to distinguish yourself from competitors. If you try to attract everyone, you’ll simply blend in – and that’s the last thing you want when opening a hotel.

For people to see your value, everything you show online needs to be aligned with your identity: : your property, ideal guest, website, social media…

So, before you think about pricing or channels, you should get clear on who you are and who you serve. 

Define your target guest clearly

Everything starts with a deep understanding of your target audience. 

Ask yourself:

  • Are you kid-friendly and pet-friendly?

  • What price category are you in?

  • Which types of tourists visit your area?

  • Do you cater to city-trippers, digital nomads, couples, families…?

Next,  list all key characteristics of your target guest(s):

  • Typical length of stay

  • Booking window (last-minute or >3 months ahead)

  • Price sensitivity

  • Key expectations (location, atmosphere, service, amenities)

Clarity here makes every other decision easier.

Decide your market positioning

Are there any hotels in your market you aspire to be compared to? 

Keep this in mind when deciding your market position:

  • Price level

  • Accommodation type

  • Traveler type

  • Tone of voice

  • Rate plan structure

Determine what you’re competing on, for example:

  • Price?

  • Design and experience?

  • Location and convenience?

Be realistic. If you price like a boutique hotel, the entire experience must justify it. Any discrepancy between your positioning and reality damages your reputation and performance.

Write and test your value proposition

Your value proposition ties your guest profile and your positioning together in one clear message.

In one or two sentences, define:

  • Who your hotel is for

  • What makes it different

When someone lands on your website, they should understand within a couple of seconds why they should book you instead of a competitor.

What you’ve decided in this first step will shape your website, OTAs, ads and pricing structure. When you know exactly who you attract and what you offer, you avoid competing purely on price and protect your margins from day one.

Hotelier handing keys to a woman while her partner watches in a cozy, warmly lit pub-style reception area.

2. Set up your room types

Overcomplicating your room categories  confuse guests and hurt conversion. 

Create a clear hierarchy, structuring your rooms from your entry-level room to your top category. Each level up should add something tangible that guests value.

These are the most common distinctions:

  • More space

  • Larger bed

  • Better view

  • Balcony or terrace

  • Additional amenities

Avoid overlapping categories that make guests hesitate. If the difference between “Superior” and “Deluxe” is unclear, rethink the structure. Use descriptive names based on size, layout, view or other features.

It’s crucial to keep your room names and descriptions identical across: 

Otherwise, potential guests may question whether prices and amenities are correct. When guests immediately understand what they’re booking, they decide faster and are less likely to leave your website to compare options elsewhere.

3. Build a logical rate plan structure

For travelers booking accommodation, easy comparison is key. Just like your room types, your rate plan structure should be as simple as possible, with clear differences between rates.

Too many options, small price differences and complicated wording all lead to decision fatigue.

Start with a clean foundation:

  • Flexible rate

  • Non-refundable rate

  • Breakfast included (if applicable)

Clarity beats complexity. Simple rate plans are easier to explain, easier to manage and easier to sell.

Make differences obvious, so guests instantly see why one rate is cheaper than another. If the price gap between flexible and non-refundable is almost negligible, most guests will pick flexible. Make the difference meaningful in order to secure more committed bookings when demand is strong. 

Clearly communicate:

  • Cancellation policy

  • Payment timing

  • Included services

Consistency is important here too, so double-check descriptions of policies and restrictions on OTAs and your own website.

4. Establish your price point and strategy

Your price is the first thing potential guests see and it immediately signals where you sit in the market. Too low, and you risk looking low-value. Too high, and you set expectations that might be impossible to meet.

Set one flexible base rate per room type

Start by defining a clear base rate for every room category. This will be the foundation of your entire revenue structure.

It should be:

  • Refundable

  • Your main public rate

  • The anchor for all other rate plans

From this base rate, you can build:

  • A slightly lower non-refundable rate

  • Breakfast-included options

  • Package rates with added value and services

Align with your competitive set

Do not copy competitor prices blindly, but compare strategically.

A hotel with stronger reviews and better amenities can justify higher pricing. A new property often needs slightly more competitive positioning in the beginning, but not at the expense of perceived value.

Not sure who your true competitors are? Learn all about building your competitive set (compset) in this blog.

Define your boundaries

Before opening, set your limits:

  • A minimum rate you will not go below

  • A maximum rate you feel confident charging during peak demand

Minimum boundaries prevent panic discounting during slow periods. Consistently dropping your rates can condition the market to wait for these discounts. Maximum boundaries prevent overpricing during events, holidays and peak seasons.

Finetune your pricing strategy and prepare to scale 

Many independent hoteliers spend between two and ten hours per week checking competitor prices and adjusting rates manually. That might work at first, but once bookings pick up, it quickly becomes unsustainable.

In the first three months:

  • Monitor occupancy weekly

  • Track booking pace and pick-up

  • Observe how far in advance guests are booking

This is how you learn your booking curve and demand patterns to finetune your pricing strategy.

Already start looking into hotel pricing software now, before things get too overwhelming, so you’re ready to scale. 

An AI-powered solution like Lighthouse can automatically analyze competitor rates, market demand and local events and update your prices in real time. That way, you don’t fall behind on bookings and revenue by reacting too late. You stay ahead and optimize your online presence, while still adhering to your price limits and other rules you set.

Automation does not take away control, but empowers you to execute your strategy consistently while giving back time to focus on other tasks.

Two travelers with suitcases at a hotel reception desk; woman in red jacket checking in, man beside her and floral arrangement on a shelf.

5. Choose the right booking channels

More visibility sounds good, but the goal is not to be everywhere. It’s to:

  • Be present where your guests actually search

  • Generate bookings that support your bottom line

  • Keep an overview and stay in control

Select channels that match your guest

Before signing up to any OTA, revisit your target audience. A business-oriented city hotel and a countryside retreat don’t need the same distribution mix. Choosing channels strategically keeps your setup manageable, focused and effective.

Not all channels serve the same purpose. Some platforms bring reach and visibility, others drive booking volume and some allow for better margins. A healthy balance is key. Read more about choosing the right booking channels here.

Understanding your commission math

A $150 room sold through an OTA with a 15% commission costs you $22.50. At 100 bookings per month, that’s $2,250 in commission.

That doesn’t mean OTAs are bad. They bring visibility and demand. But understanding the math helps you balance exposure and profitability.

A strong direct booking module on your website, combined with a smart pricing strategy, can significantly reduce commission costs.

Automate synchronization and double-check settings

When you don’t have a distribution team, every extra channel adds complexity, work and risk of errors. On the other hand, sticking to one high-commission OTA hurts your profitability. That’s why you need a channel management tool to keep your distribution channels in sync.

Before going live, carefully review your availability, pricing, restrictions and room mapping across all platforms. Even a small configuration error can cost you revenue or lead to overbookings early on.

Check:

  • Room-to-rate mapping

  • Minimum stay rules

  • Closed dates

  • Price consistency

A clean distribution setup protects your launch and reduces unnecessary stress in your first weeks of operation.

6. Make your hotel easy to book

If your booking process feels confusing or slow, guests simply close the tab. Booking should feel straightforward, smooth and reassuring, even on mobile devices, where most leisure bookings now happen.

Align your pricing and policies everywhere

Guests often compare your website and (multiple) OTAs side by side or on metasearch platforms like Google Hotels. Any discrepancies can raise doubt.

Make sure:

  • Room names and amenities match exactly

  • Pricing is consistent

  • Cancellation policies are aligned

Make key information visible

Guests want clear information without digging through paragraphs of text. 

To avoid hesitation and complaints, clearly display:

  • Cancellation deadlines

  • Payment timing

  • What’s included in each rate

Test the full booking journey

It’s crucial for your booking experience to be as smooth as possible for guests. Any friction in booking, payment or confirmation fuels uncertainty and distrust.

See if your hotel website meets all criteria with this practical website checklist.

7. Upload professional photos that sell rooms

Photos shape expectations instantly. Before guests read your description, they’ve already formed an impression based on your images. Strong visuals support your pricing. Weak or misleading visuals undermine it.

Use high-quality photos for every room type

Each room category deserves its own clear visual representation. One generic image for multiple categories creates confusion.

Include:

  • A full-room overview

  • Bathroom photos

  • Key distinguishing features or amenities

  • Environment of your property

Clear visuals justify price differences and reduce uncertainty. Guests should immediately understand what they’re paying for.

Convey the full experience

Guests are booking more than a bed. They’re booking an experience.

Include:

  • Lobby or reception

  • Breakfast area

  • Exterior and surroundings

Context helps guests picture their stay from arrival to departure. The easier they can imagine it, the easier they can commit.

Have you already written out a full marketing plan for your hotel? From website and SEO to email marketing, you can find the full breakdown in our marketing guide to make sure you haven’t missed anything.

8. Ensure your tech setup is seamless

Every accommodation needs technology to some degree, but using disconnected tools can slow you down instead of improving efficiency. It creates manual work, duplicate data entry and room for error. Your systems must work together seamlessly from day one. 

Ideally, your initial setup could include:

  • Automated pricing recommendations

  • Channel synchronization to avoid overbookings

  • A direct booking module on your website

  • Secure online payments

  • Reservation management for check-ins and guest communication

  • Integrations with your accounting or POS system

The simpler and more connected your systems are, the more time you save.

Configure your PMS correctly

Your property management system or reservation software is the backbone of your operations. 

To prevent chaos, double-check:

  • Room type setup

  • Rate structures

  • Restrictions

  • Availability settings

  • Integration and mapping with other systems

Confirm syncing across all channels

Your channel and pricing management tools must synchronize automatically in real time. If not,  overbookings or incorrect prices can appear fast and damage trust.

Test:

  • Pricing, restrictions and availability changes

  • Syncing between booking channels

  • Minimum-stay rules

Test booking and payment scenarios

Run real test bookings under different conditions to ensure everything works properly.

Simulate:

  • Flexible bookings

  • Non-refundable bookings

  • Mobile reservations

  • Different card types

If something requires manual intervention immediately, it needs fixing before opening. Smooth systems create a calm launch.

9. Prepare your guest communication flow

Since most misunderstandings are caused by misaligned expectations before arrival, proactive guest communication is key. It prevents repetitive questions, confusion and complaints.

Finetune confirmation and pre-arrival emails

Your confirmation email should answer the questions guests typically ask later.

Include clear details about:

  • Check-in times

  • Parking

  • Breakfast

  • Cancellation rules

But don’t forget that guest communication doesn’t stop after check-in. There are many ways to engage guests, upsell during their stay or even entice them to book again. Read all about email marketing in our blog.

Reinforce key policies

Guests may not remember the exact rate they selected. Repeating important details avoids confusion.

Clearly restate:

  • Cancellation deadlines

  • Payment terms

  • Inclusions

Repetition reduces friction. Clear expectations protect early reviews.

Align tone with your positioning

Your tone should reflect your personality and positioning. A boutique property should sound warm and personal. A business hotel should sound efficient and direct.

Consistency across your website, emails and front desk communication strengthens your brand. A unified voice builds familiarity and trust.

Wondering how you can automate different parts of the guest journey? Read all about it in this blog on guest journey automation.

10. Get ready for guest reviews

Plan your review strategy

Your first reviews carry extra weight and can accelerate your growth when managed well. They influence how future guests perceive your value and quality.

Make a clear plan to manage reviews, so you don’t miss early momentum:

  • Which platforms will you prioritize?

  • How and when will you request reviews?

  • How will you phrase requests to encourage reviews?

  • How will you respond to reviews consistently?

  • How will you use feedback to refine guest experiences?

Respond thoughtfully and swiftly

Every review deserves your attention. You don’t have to respond to every single one, but prioritize negative ones and show that you take the feedback to heart. Always reply promptly, professionally and authentically. Calm, constructive replies strengthen trust with future guests.

If you have very limited time, or many rooms and channels to manage with a small team, adopting an affordable tool to speed up replies is really worth it.

Read all about how you can manage your online reputation more efficiently in our blog.

11. Make sure you tell the same story everywhere

Guests compare your pricing, photos and messaging in seconds. If they don’t align, trust erodes. Consistency across all touchpoints creates credibility.

Align promise and reality

If you describe your property as luxury, your rooms, pricing and service must support that claim. If you position yourself as budget-friendly, own it confidently.

Mixed signals create doubt. Clear alignment builds confidence.

Align visuals, descriptions and rates

Double-check that:

  • Room descriptions match reality

  • Photos reflect current setup

  • Pricing matches positioning

Expectation gaps are one of the biggest causes of negative reviews. Consistency protects your reputation.

Highlight relevant local context

Help guests understand why staying with you makes sense.

Mention:

  • Nearby attractions

  • Events

  • Nature

  • Business hubs

Context makes your hotel feel purposeful, not generic.

Did you know you can even partner up with other businesses to stand out from the competition? Read all about strategic partnerships in our blog.

12. Run a final launch check

After you’ve worked through every area in detail, it’s important to take one last step back before you officially open the doors. A structured final review helps you discover small issues you may have overlooked. 

Evaluate your hotel as a guest

Look at your website and booking flow objectively.

Ask yourself:

  • Would I confidently book this hotel right now?

  • Is pricing clear without explanation?

  • Are room differences obvious?

  • Does the booking journey feel effortless?

If the answer is yes, you are not just ready to open – you are ready to succeed!

Lighthouse can help you launch your new hotel or B&B with confidence by making sure all essential tech is in place. Our complete platform helps independents thrive from the start while saving valuable time. Cost-effective and easy to use, even without experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many OTAs should a small hotel use?

Focus on the platforms your target guest actually uses. Start with one or two major channels and expand strategically. More channels only make sense if you can manage them properly.

Should I offer non-refundable rates when opening?

Yes. A clear non-refundable option helps secure committed bookings and improves cash flow, especially during high-demand periods.

How do I know if my price is too low?

If your rooms consistently sell out too early, you may be underpricing. Monitoring booking pace and competitor positioning helps you identify missed revenue opportunities.

How can I reduce OTA commission?

Strengthen your direct booking strategy through a clear website offer, better rate parity management and channel-specific availability logic.

Do I need pricing software if I only have 10 rooms?

Even small properties benefit from structured pricing. The fewer rooms you have, the more every booking matters. Consistent, data-driven pricing protects your revenue.

Start ticking off those to do's right now

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