That gap is the entire case for Google Ads for hotels, and why independent properties that understand the math consistently out-earn those still paying 20% OTA commissions on every reservation.
This guide runs the actual numbers, explains how Google Hotel Ads differ from standard Search Ads, and covers exactly when paid search makes sense and when it doesn't yet.
Why Hospitality Has an Unfair Advantage on Google
Most hotel owners assume Google Ads is expensive. They picture startups burning through $50,000/month on clicks and assume the economics don't work for a 20-room inn.
The opposite is true.
Hospitality CPCs sit between $0.63 and $1.95 because the competition for those keywords is lower than almost every other high-intent category. A traveler searching "boutique hotel in Charleston" is one of the most valuable searchers on the internet. They have a specific need, a specific destination, and they're ready to book. And they cost you less than $2 to reach.
Compare that to OTA economics. Booking.com charges 15–25% commission on every reservation. Expedia runs 15–30%, often higher for independent properties without negotiating leverage. On a $200 booking, that's $30–$50 in commission, permanently, on every single reservation, forever.
The Commission Math Independent Hotels Need to See
Let's use a real scenario. A 20-room boutique hotel with a $180 average daily rate (ADR) running at 65% occupancy handles roughly 390 room-nights per month. If 50% of those bookings come through OTAs at an average 20% commission, the monthly cost is:
195 OTA bookings x $180 x 20% = $7,020/month to OTAs. Annual: $84,240/year.
Now run a Google Ads scenario. Monthly ad spend of $600. Average CPC of $1.50 in a mid-size market. That buys roughly 400 clicks per month. At a 4% conversion rate (the industry benchmark for hotel paid search), that's 16 direct bookings.
16 bookings x $180 = $2,880 in direct revenue. Return on ad spend: 4.8:1. Cost per booking via Google Ads: $37.50. Cost per booking via OTA: $36. At baseline, nearly identical.
But Google Ads has two advantages that compound over time that OTA commissions never will. First: as campaigns mature and optimization improves over 60–90 days, ROAS of 6:1 to 8:1 is achievable for well-run hotel campaigns. At 6:1, your cost per booking drops to $25 while the OTA stays at $36. Second: every guest who books through Google Ads gives you their email. OTA guests belong to Booking.com. They will never be yours.
See our Google Ads management packages for hotels if you want to run this math for your specific property.
Google Hotel Ads vs Google Search Ads: What's the Difference?
These are two separate products, and the distinction matters for independent hotels.
Google Search Ads are the standard paid search ads that appear at the top of Google results when someone searches a keyword. You target phrases like "boutique hotel in Savannah" or "hotels near French Quarter New Orleans." Clicks go to your website. You need a keyword strategy, ad copy, and a booking engine to convert the traffic. No special integrations required.
Google Hotel Ads are the rate cards that appear inside Google's dedicated hotel search panel, with photos, pricing, and availability directly in the results. They pull live rates from your property management system via a rate feed. This requires integration between your PMS and Google's hotel platform.
For most independent hotels just starting with paid search, Search Ads are the right first step. They're faster to set up, require no PMS integration, and work with any booking engine. Google Hotel Ads become valuable once you have the infrastructure in place. One important note: as of February 2025, Google eliminated commission-based bidding for Hotel Ads. Hotels now pay per click regardless of whether the click converts, which makes proper campaign management more important than ever.
What Google Ads Actually Costs for a Small Hotel
There are two costs: ad spend and management. Ad spend goes directly to Google. Recommended minimums by market:
- Small/secondary markets (Asheville, Savannah, Santa Fe): $300–$600/month to start
- Mid-size competitive markets (Nashville, Austin, Portland, Denver): $600–$1,500/month
- High-competition markets (NYC, Miami, Las Vegas, San Francisco): $1,500–$3,000/month
Management covers building campaigns, managing bids, writing ad copy, optimizing for conversion, and reporting results. Professional management runs $997–$2,497/month depending on campaign scope. The alternative is running it yourself, which takes 10–15 hours/month of ongoing attention and typically 3–6 months to optimize.
Raquel manages a 17-room inn in Asheville. In early 2025, she spent six weeks trying to run Google Ads herself after watching a YouTube tutorial. She got clicks and saw no bookings. The problem: her ads were sending traffic to a page with no booking engine, so visitors bounced immediately back to Expedia. $420 in ad spend, zero bookings.
After handing campaigns to a hospitality-specific agency, the first fix was the destination: sending ad traffic to a properly built booking page, not a contact form. Within six weeks, her cost per booking via Google was $42. Her OTA commission per booking was $34. Close enough that the guest data ownership alone made it worthwhile.
What Hotels Should Run Google Ads (And What Should Wait)
Not every hotel is ready for paid search. Getting this wrong is how you spend $600 and get nothing.
Hotels That Should Start Now
- Properties with a functioning direct booking engine on their website
- Hotels paying 15%+ OTA commissions on 50+ bookings/month
- Properties in markets with real search volume for their location type
- Hotels with a professional website and fast mobile performance
Hotels That Should Wait
- Hotels with no booking engine — Google Ads traffic routes to OTAs; you pay for clicks that Booking.com converts
- Properties in very low-demand markets where search volume is minimal
- Hotels that haven't built the direct booking infrastructure to capture the traffic
The sequence matters. A hotel website built for direct bookings and a direct booking system come first. Google Ads is the accelerant. Without the foundation, you're paying for clicks that go nowhere.
What a Well-Run Hotel Google Ads Campaign Looks Like
Most hotels that run Google Ads themselves make the same three mistakes: targeting too broadly, not tracking conversions properly, and not having mobile-optimized landing pages.
A well-structured hotel paid search campaign covers three areas. First, branded terms — protect your own name so OTAs can't poach that intent when someone searches your property directly. Second, local intent — phrases like "boutique hotel in [your city]" and "hotels near [local landmark]," targeting travelers close to booking without a specific property in mind. Third, conversion tracking — every booking must be traced back to the ad click that drove it. Without tracking, you're guessing at ROI.
Mobile bidding adjustments also matter because 60% of hotel searches happen on mobile. If your booking page doesn't convert on mobile, bid lower on mobile traffic until it does.
How We Run Hotel Google Ads
Our Google Ads management for hotels covers everything: campaign setup, keyword research, ad copy, bid management, weekly optimization, and monthly reporting. Clients pay Google directly for ad spend; we charge for the management.
Campaigns go live within 48–72 hours. No discovery calls. No hourly billing. Setup fee of $200 is waived with a 6-month commitment.
We've managed paid search for hospitality clients as part of Designodin's track record of 200+ projects since 2014. Hotel Google Ads is one of the few marketing channels where the math clearly favors small independent properties over large chains, because you're buying cheap clicks, not competing on marketing budgets.
OTAs are not going away. But every direct booking you generate is a guest you own, a commission you keep, and a customer you can market to again at zero additional cost.
Or reach us at contact@dohospitality.co
Results vary by market, competition, ad spend, and optimization.