The debate at every hotelier roundtable
TripAdvisor was in the 2010s what Google is today: the central reputation platform of the international tourism world. In 2026 it looks different. Among Swiss hoteliers you hear two positions: "TripAdvisor is dead, nobody books there anymore" — or the exact opposite: "Without TripAdvisor we're invisible to international guests."
Both are right, depending on the situation. The data: 50% of Swiss hotels still use direct TripAdvisor integration, alongside Google Hotel Ads (64%) and Trivago (54%). These numbers come from the hotelleriesuisse direct-booking study 2024. 50% isn't a dying platform — it's a sideways-running one, with clear winners and clear losers.
This piece delivers the diagnostic test: does your hotel belong to the 50% that should keep playing TripAdvisor? Or to the other 50% who'd better invest resources elsewhere?
Where TripAdvisor still lives in Switzerland
The platform still carries weight in Switzerland mainly in these constellations:
Tourist hotspots with international guest share above 40%: Zermatt, Interlaken, Lucerne, Lugano, Lauterbrunnen, St. Moritz, Grindelwald, Wengen, Murten, Montreux. In these regions international guests don't google "hotel in Zurich" — they check TripAdvisor, because their home-market travel planning reflex is built around it. Especially US, UK, and Asian guests stay TripAdvisor-fixed, while Central and Northern Europe have long since moved to Google.
Seasonal hotels with a clear high season: if 70% of your bookings fall between December and March (winter sports) or July/August (summer tourism), you benefit from the "travel research phase" of guests planning 3 to 6 months ahead — and they use TripAdvisor more than Google in that phase.
Boutique and character hotels: TripAdvisor's qualitative reviews (longer texts, more photos) protect boutique houses from the reduction to pure star counts that dominates Booking. Anyone positioned as an "experience-driven" house wins more on TripAdvisor than on Booking.
Where TripAdvisor is dead in Switzerland
Conversely: stop wasting resources on TripAdvisor if you…
- run a city business hotel in Zurich, Basel, or Bern with mostly B2B bookings (conferences, commuter stays, Swiss domestic travel)
- run a casual city hotel with Booking as the main source (80%+ OTA volume, little tourism seasonality)
- run an apart-hotel or lifestyle hotel for Swiss mid-market (they use Google, not TripAdvisor)
- generate fewer than 10 TripAdvisor reviews per year — the reach is too thin to be worth it
The 3-minute diagnostic test
Answer three questions:
Question 1: What's the share of international guests in your occupancy?
- above 40% → +2 points
- 20 to 40% → +1 point
- below 20% → 0 points
Question 2: How many TripAdvisor reviews came in over the past 12 months?
- above 30 → +2 points
- 10 to 30 → +1 point
- below 10 → 0 points
Question 3: How important is seasonal tourism for you?
- above 60% of annual bookings in a 4-month high season → +2 points
- 30 to 60% → +1 point
- below 30% → 0 points
Verdict:
- 4 to 6 points: TripAdvisor is relevant for you, keep maintaining
- 2 to 3 points: grey zone — minimal effort, no major investment
- 0 to 1 point: focus on Google
When TripAdvisor is relevant: what you need to do
Reply frequency and tone
Different rules apply on TripAdvisor than on Google. Reviews are longer, more international, often more emotional. Replies must be correspondingly longer — at least 4 to 5 sentences, ideally in the reviewer's language. English is the default, but Italian, French, and German are needed depending on reviewer profile.
The four-block formula from our reply templates applies here too — but weighted with more recognition of the specific point, because reviews are more detailed.
Photo refresh rhythm
TripAdvisor favours visually strong profiles. Recommendation: 3 to 5 new photos per month, at least one of staff or service experience (not just rooms and exteriors). This differentiates you from the standardisation of Booking profiles.
Manage the Q&A section
Underused, highly effective: TripAdvisor has a Q&A section where future guests can ask publicly. Anyone replying within 24 hours signals massive service readiness. Seed questions yourself too — typical pre-booking questions ("Is your hotel suitable for children?", "Is there a shuttle service?") and answer them yourself.
Travelers' Choice and awards
TripAdvisor distributes annual awards (Travelers' Choice, Best of the Best). These awards don't feature in Swiss marketing mainstream, but globally they're a trust signal. Reaching the top 25% of your category lets you use the award badge on your own website and in Booking descriptions — that measurably lifts direct booking conversion.
When TripAdvisor isn't relevant: delete actively or ignore?
A frequent question: "If TripAdvisor doesn't work for us, should we delete the profile?" Answer: no. Active deletion costs backlink value (TripAdvisor links to your website, that's SEO-relevant) and confuses leftover guests.
Minimum maintenance: check in once a month, reply to the few reviews, keep photos current. That costs 20 minutes and protects against script damage.
The Google-TripAdvisor synergy
Important to understand: TripAdvisor and Google aren't competitors — they feed each other. Studies show: 60 to 70% of guests who discover a hotel on TripAdvisor separately google the hotel name. If the Google profile convinces, the direct booking happens.
That means: anyone active on TripAdvisor without maintaining Google properly gives away the second half of the funnel. And anyone maintaining Google perfectly while ignoring TripAdvisor becomes invisible to international guests.
Conclusion: with 4 to 6 points in the diagnostic test above, maintain both platforms — then Google is the direct-booking gate and TripAdvisor the international funnel.
Where Trophy helps
The reply mechanic we build at Trophy works platform-agnostically. AI-assisted reply drafts in the reviewer's language run both for Google and for TripAdvisor. Photo maintenance and post rhythm are also platform-agnostic.
More on the mechanic: How Trophy works and For hotels.
Sources
- hotelleriesuisse direct-booking study 2024 (platform connection rates)
- TripAdvisor Insights 2024 (review lengths, language distribution)
- HSLU tourism research (direct-booking conversion paths)