What's In a Hotel Name?
Naming patterns, cultural fingerprints, and an identity crisis across 121,425 hotels in 7 countries.
121,425 hotel names analyzed · 7 countries · March 2026
Executive Summary
We analyzed the names of 121,425 hotels across 7 markets to understand how the hotel industry names itself — and what patterns emerge. The findings reveal deep cultural differences in naming conventions, a surprising genericness problem, and a stark divide between chain and independent properties.
Nearly half of all hotels include the word "Hotel" in their name, but usage varies dramatically: Italy leads at 58.3%, while the US sits at just 19.5%, dominated instead by chain formats like "Inn & Suites by Marriott." Romance-language countries put "Hotel" first ("Hotel Belvedere"), English-speaking countries put it last ("The Grand Hotel") or drop it entirely.
The genericness problem is measurable: 9.6% of hotels share their exact name with at least one other property. When someone asks an AI "recommend Hotel Europa," there are 66 possible answers across 4 countries. For AI systems generating hotel recommendations, name collisions create real disambiguation challenges.
The Word "Hotel" Dominates — But Not Everywhere
Nearly half (49.3%) of all properties include the word "Hotel" in their name. But usage varies dramatically by market. Italy leads at 58.3%, while the US is a clear outlier at just 19.5% — American naming is dominated by chain formats: "Inn & Suites by Marriott," "Holiday Inn Express," "Hampton Inn by Hilton."
"Hotel" Usage by Country
Other Descriptor Words
Each market has its own vocabulary. Spain has "casa rural" and "hostal." Germany has "Gasthof" and "Pension." France has "Auberge" and "Maison." These terms carry cultural and legal meaning that goes beyond branding.
Hotel Descriptor Keywords by Country
| Word | Overall % | IT | FR | DE | GB | ES | US |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| hotel | 49.3% | 58.3% | 56.7% | 51.5% | 50.9% | 43% | 19.5% |
| inn | 5.5% | 0.3% | 0.6% | 1.5% | 14% | 0.2% | 34% |
| villa | 2.1% | 5.1% | 1.4% | 1.2% | 0.2% | 1.6% | 0.2% |
| casa | 1.9% | 1.8% | 0.2% | 0.1% | 0% | 8.2% | 0.6% |
| hostal | 1.5% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 9.5% | 0% |
| albergo | 1.3% | 5.5% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% |
Cross-Country Naming Fingerprints
Each market has a distinct naming "fingerprint" — a combination of structural patterns that make hotel names immediately identifiable by country. You can tell where a hotel is just by reading its name.
Naming Position Patterns by Country
France
"Hôtel [article] [name]" — Hôtel de la Gare, Hôtel du Commerce, Hôtel le Provençal. The article-heavy construction is uniquely French.
Germany
"Hotel [preposition] [landmark]" — Hotel am Markt, Hotel zur Post, Hotel zum Hirsch. Locational naming tied to town geography.
Italy
"Hotel [name]" in its simplest form — Hotel Belvedere, Hotel Villa Rosa, Grand Hotel. Italy has the highest "Hotel first" rate (43.7%).
Spain
A distinct "Casa Rural" / "Hotel Rural" tradition. Rural tourism has its own naming convention with 9.5% using "hostal."
UK
"The [name] Hotel" — the definite article is practically mandatory (24.4%). The Royal Hotel, The Crown Hotel, The George Hotel.
USA
Chain grammar dominates: "[Brand] [City]" with "by [Parent]" suffixes. Independent naming barely registers against the franchise machine.
Naming Pattern Fingerprints by Country
| Country | Hotels | Hotel First | Hotel Last | Hôtel de/du | "The" Prefix | Numbers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Italy | 29,321 | 43.7% | 6.4% | 0.3% | 0.7% | 2.4% |
| France | 19,779 | 34.7% | 3.3% | 5.8% | 1.2% | 4.2% |
| Spain | 19,480 | 34.2% | 3.1% | 0.2% | 0.6% | 2.7% |
| Germany | 24,342 | 31.3% | 4% | 0% | 0.5% | 2.2% |
| Netherlands | 3,182 | 25.9% | 6.8% | 4.4% | 2.6% | 2.9% |
| UK | 12,263 | 1.2% | 37.8% | 0.2% | 24.4% | 3.3% |
The Generic Name Problem: 287 Ways to Say "Hotel Europa"
9.6% of hotels share their exact name (after normalization) with at least one other property. That's 11,614 hotels with non-unique names.
When someone searches "Hotel Europa," there are 66 exact-match results across 4 countries. But the problem goes deeper: across 7 countries, 287 hotels use some variant of Europa or Europe in their name — including the French "Hôtel de l'Europe," Italian "Europeo," and German "Europäischer Hof." For a human, context (city, booking platform) disambiguates. For an AI assistant generating recommendations, this is a nightmare — it either has to guess which one you mean, or worse, it conflates properties.
The Europa/Europe Name Family Across Europe
66 properties share the exact name "Hotel Europa." The map shows all 287 properties in the Europa/Europe name family — "Europa" (177), "Hôtel de l'Europe" (37), "Europe" (23), "...l'Europe" (19), "...d'Europe" (16), "Europäisch" (7), "Europalace" (4), and "Europeo/a" (4) — across 7 countries. Use the filters to explore each variant.
Top 20 Most Duplicated Hotel Names (Exact Match)
Most Duplicated Hotel Names (Exact Match)
| Name | Count | Countries |
|---|---|---|
| Hotel Europa | 66 | IT, ES, DE, FR |
| Hotel Belvedere | 46 | IT, DE, ES, NL, FR |
| Hotel Eden | 42 | IT, FR, ES, DE |
| Hotel Royal | 34 | IT, DE, ES, NL, FR |
| Hôtel de France | 33 | FR, DE, IT |
| Hotel zur Post | 32 | DE |
The Most Common Bigrams Tell a Story
The most common two-word sequences reveal how each market structures its hotel names. France is dominated by article patterns ("Hôtel le," "de la"). The US is dominated by chain grammar ("inn suites," "by IHG," "by Marriott"). Each market's naming DNA is embedded in its bigrams.
Top 15 Hotel Name Bigrams
Cultural bigrams
"hotel restaurant" (2,919) — the French/German tradition of hotel-restaurants. "casa rural" (590) — Spain's rural tourism. "hotel villa" (814) — Italy's classic.
Chain bigrams
"by IHG" (1,048), "by Wyndham" (936), "by Marriott" (900), "by Hilton" (665) — the franchise suffix has become its own naming convention.
Chain vs. Independent: A 2.3x Schema Gap
11.9% of hotels (14,425) are identifiable as chain-affiliated by name alone. Chain hotels have 2.3x better schema.org implementation than independents — but independents have higher guest ratings.
Chain vs Independent Comparison
Top Chains by Hotel Count
Largest Hotel Chains (by name detection)
| Chain | Hotels | Key Brands |
|---|---|---|
| Accor | 2,068 | ibis, Novotel, Mercure, Sofitel |
| IHG | 1,318 | Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza |
| Logis | 1,191 | French independent network |
| Best Western | 1,105 | Global franchise |
| Marriott | 1,086 | by Marriott brands |
| Hilton | 1,066 | Hampton, DoubleTree |
Name Length: The Sweet Spot Is 4-5 Words
The average hotel name is 3.7 words / 23.7 characters. The sweet spot is 4-5 words — long enough to be descriptive and distinctive, short enough to be memorable. Schema scores peak in this range. Very short names (1-2 words) tend to be generic. Very long names (9+) often include noise.
Name Length Distribution & Schema Score
Name Length Analysis
| Length | Hotels | Avg Schema Score | Avg Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 word | 2,560 | 7.8 | 4.35 |
| 2 words | 31,341 | 10.1 | 4.28 |
| 3 words | 35,239 | 11.8 | 4.28 |
| 4-5 words | 34,311 | 14.5 | 4.29 |
| 6-8 words | 14,918 | 14.5 | 4.25 |
| 9+ words | 3,056 | 11.1 | 4.29 |
The Accent Question: Hôtel vs Hotel
17.4% of hotel names contain accented characters (é, ô, ü, ñ, etc.). French hotels overwhelmingly use "Hôtel" (with circumflex) rather than "Hotel." This creates a real question for search and AI: does "Hôtel de la Paix" match "Hotel de la Paix"?
Accent Usage by Country
Name-Domain Consistency
We checked whether the hotel name matches its website domain. Surprisingly, hotels with no name-domain match have the highest schema scores (16.5). This likely reflects chain hotels: "Holiday Inn Express London Heathrow" lives at ihg.com, not at a matching domain.
Name-Domain Match vs Schema Score
Name Distinctiveness: A TF-IDF Approach
We computed a distinctiveness score for each hotel name using inverse word frequency — rarer words score higher. A name made of common words like "Grand Hotel Spa" scores low; a name with unique words like "Mama Shelter" scores high.
Distinctiveness vs Schema Score
Frequently Asked Questions
Methodology
Data Source
121,425 hotel names from Google Maps data, filtered for category "hotel," with a website and 10+ reviews. Covers 7 countries: Italy (29,321), Germany (24,342), France (19,779), Spain (19,480), USA (12,468), UK (12,263), Netherlands (3,182). US data covers major tourism cities only, not nationwide.
Name Processing
Names are analyzed as-is (original casing and characters), then normalized (lowercase, accent-stripped, punctuation removed) for comparison. "Web oficial" / "official site" suffixes are stripped. Bigram extraction uses the normalized form. Distinctiveness scoring uses TF-IDF (term frequency-inverse document frequency).
Chain Detection
Hotels are classified as chain-affiliated if their name contains known chain/brand keywords (Marriott, Hilton, IHG, Accor brands, etc.). This is a conservative estimate — hotels affiliated through booking channels or management agreements without naming are classified as independent.
Schema Scores
Schema.org completeness scores (0-100) reference the Hotel Schema.org Adoption Study 2026, a companion study based on the same hotel dataset.
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