When a guest books through your own website or writes to you directly, that stay is yours in full: no platform takes a percentage, and the guest's details stay in your database for future seasons. When the same booking comes through a platform like Booking or Airbnb, a share of between 15% and 25% disappears into commissions — and with it goes the direct relationship with the person who chose your property. To increase direct bookings is not to walk away from the platforms: it is to stop depending on them alone.

What direct bookings are and why they matter
A direct booking is a stay confirmed with no intermediary: the traveller arrives on your website or a dedicated landing page, calls you or writes to you, and books with you. A platform booking, by contrast, runs through an intermediary — Booking, Airbnb, Vrbo — that sits between you and the guest and takes a commission on every stay.
The difference is not ideological, it is economic. On a high-value property, where the average stay is expensive, the commission you hand to a platform can be worth several thousand a season. Direct bookings are worth, on average, several thousand more per property each year in margin — full margin, not gross revenue. To that you can add a less visible but equally real asset: the guest's contact details, which you can market to again next season without paying to acquire them a second time.
| Aspect | Direct booking | Platform booking |
|---|---|---|
| Commission | None | 15-25% (Booking 15%, up to 25% · Airbnb ~15.5% · Vrbo ~8%) |
| Guest data | Yours, reusable | Mediated by the platform |
| Control of the relationship | Full (language, tone, upsell) | Limited by platform rules |
| Dependence risk | Low | High: a policy change exposes you |
To understand how much commissions really weigh on your bottom line, we have written a dedicated guide to Booking and Airbnb commissions.
The average today and a realistic target
Today, across luxury hospitality, direct bookings account for an average of only around 20% of the calendar: the rest comes through the platforms. That figure describes a widespread dependence, not a fate. The right question is not "how do I remove the platforms", but "how do I gradually shift a share of the calendar onto my own direct channel".
A realistic target is not 100%. A solid, sustainable goal is to bring direct bookings to 35-50% of the calendar over one or two seasons, keeping the platforms as a shop window for first discovery. Be wary of anyone who promises to wipe out commissions overnight: a direct channel is built, calibrated and grown season after season. This same dual-engine logic — demand that is created, intent that is captured — is what makes a stronger hotel brand lower the cost of acquisition over time.
The four pillars of a direct booking strategy
A direct booking channel that works rests on four pillars. Skip one and you leave the system half-built — and the results half-delivered.
1. Offer and positioning
Before any campaign, you have to define why a high-spending guest should book directly with you rather than look you up on a platform. That means working on how the property is positioned, on seasonality, on the experiences included, and on a clear advantage for booking direct — a better rate, more flexibility, an attentiveness the platforms cannot offer. Without a recognisable offer, even the best traffic will not convert.
2. Demand with Meta and Instagram
Most travellers are not yet searching for your property: they have to be drawn in. Meta and Instagram exist to create desire among a high-value international audience, with imagery and content that tell the story of the experience. This is the engine that generates demand where none existed before.
3. Capture with Google
Those who are already searching — "villa with a pool in Tuscany", "luxury estate for a wedding" — need to be intercepted at the moment of peak intent. Google catches this warm demand and brings it to a page built to convert into a direct enquiry. Meta creates the demand, Google captures it: that is the dual-engine funnel.
4. Conversion and multilingual follow-up
An enquiry answered too slowly, or in the wrong language, is a booking lost. The final pillar is managing the enquiry through to confirmation: a fast reply, in several languages, with a single point of contact who looks after the guest. This is where many calendars quietly empty without the owner noticing — which is why a strong CRM and marketing automation setup matters as much as the campaigns themselves.
These four pillars are the heart of what we do: you can see the method in full on our services page.
The tools: site and booking engine
The pillars need an infrastructure. For a luxury property, the essentials are simple but carefully chosen.
| Tool | What it is for |
|---|---|
| Website or dedicated landing page | The direct shop window: large imagery, the story of the property, a clear call to action to request availability. |
| Booking engine | Lets the guest check availability and book directly, without going through a platform. |
| Channel manager | Syncs calendars and rates between the direct channel and the platforms, avoiding overbooking. |
| CRM / follow-up | Collects enquiries and manages replies across languages, so no contact is ever lost. |
The technical side — booking engine and channel manager — deserves a discussion of its own: how to choose the right tools for a high-value property is something we cover in our guide to channel managers and booking engines. The underlying rule is one: the guest must be able to book direct in a few steps, or they will go back to the platform where the buying experience is smoother.
The most common mistakes
- 01
Treating the site like a brochure. If there is no immediate way to request availability or book, the site does not generate direct bookings — it merely describes them.
- 02
Buying generic traffic. More clicks does not mean more guests. Without a targeted audience of high-spending travellers, the budget scatters.
- 03
Replying late, or in one language only. An international enquiry left for hours without a reply, or handled in a single language, becomes a booking that goes to someone else.
- 04
Never asking for the direct booking. Many owners offer no advantage at all to those who book with them: without a concrete reason, the guest naturally returns to the platform they already know.
The thread that ties all of these mistakes together is the same: handing the platforms a relationship that could be yours.
Want to know where to start with your property? We can look at your calendar together and tell you, with no obligation, how much of it you are leaving to the platforms. You will find us on the contact page.
