The Tripadvisor Pivot; Experience First


The TripAdvisor Pivot: What Accommodation Partners Need to Know About the Experiences-First Strategy

TripAdvisor just told the accommodation industry something many weren't ready to hear: you're no longer the priority.

In November 2025, during the Q3 earnings call, TripAdvisor announced a "fundamental shift" to become an "experiences-led and AI-enabled company." The restructuring includes cutting 20% of the workforce (approximately 450 people), merging the Viator experiences team with Brand TripAdvisor, and reducing investment in what the company diplomatically calls "legacy offerings."

Translation: TripAdvisor's core reviews and hotel metasearch business—the foundation that made TripAdvisor synonymous with travel research—is now considered legacy. Mature. Declining. A cash cow to be milked while resources shift to tours, activities, and AI tools.

For hotels and short-term rentals that treated TripAdvisor as a major channel for distribution and reputation management, this isn't just a strategy shift—it's a stealth distribution cut. Less platform innovation, declining referral traffic, and reduced accommodation partner support while TripAdvisor doubles down on monetizing experiences through Viator.

What Actually Happened: Decoding the Corporate Speak

Let's break down TripAdvisor's November 6, 2025 announcement beyond the sanitized earnings call language:

The Official Narrative

What TripAdvisor said:

  • "Fundamental shift to experiences-led and AI-enabled company"

  • "Delivering greater value and a more comprehensive experience for travelers"

  • "Restructuring to achieve $85 million in annualized cost savings"

  • "Merging Viator with Brand TripAdvisor for unified product experience"

What this actually means:

  • Viator (tours/activities) is now the profit center; hotel metasearch is maintenance mode

  • "AI-enabled" is corporate code for automation and headcount reduction

  • $85M cost cutting targets the accommodation side of the business

  • Resources are being reallocated from hotels to experiences

The Numbers Tell the Story

Why TripAdvisor is pivoting:

  • Viator revenue surpassed Brand TripAdvisor for the first time in 2024

  • Viator's take rate (commission) is significantly higher than metasearch hotel bookings

  • Google dominates local search and reviews (commoditizing TripAdvisor's core value)

  • Static content (reviews) generates less engagement than transactional experiences

  • Activist investor Starboard Value has been pressuring for strategic changes

Key executive changes:

  • Pepijn Rijvers: Named Chief Business Officer (oversees Viator/experiences expansion)

  • Kristin Dorsett: Named GM of Experiences (signaling experiences as top priority)

These aren't middle management shuffles—they're C-suite power shifts showing where TripAdvisor is betting its future.

What Accommodation Partners Are Losing

TripAdvisor's pivot isn't just about what the company says it will focus on (experiences)—it's about what will be deprioritized as resources shift. Here's what accommodation partners should expect:

1. Reduced Platform Innovation for Hotels/STRs

Past innovation areas that will stagnate:

  • Metasearch functionality improvements

  • Review management tools and analytics

  • Partner dashboard features

  • Mobile booking experience optimization

  • Direct booking integrations

Why this matters:
When a platform stops innovating, competitors gain ground. Booking.com is aggressively deploying AI tools for partners. Google continues enhancing hotel search features. TripAdvisor falling behind means less traffic and inferior partner experience compared to competing platforms.

2. Declining Traffic to Accommodation Listings

Where TripAdvisor's product attention goes, user traffic follows.

The company will increasingly optimize the user experience around experiences (tours, activities, attractions) rather than accommodation discovery. This shows up in:

  • Homepage and app featuring experiences more prominently

  • Algorithm changes favoring experience content in search

  • Marketing spend shifting from hotel/STR audiences to experience buyers

  • Email campaigns and push notifications emphasizing tours/activities

  • Partnership and content development resources focused on experiences

For properties: Less traffic from TripAdvisor = fewer reviews = lower visibility = reduced booking referrals. This becomes a negative spiral.

3. Reduced Investment in Review Quality and Fraud Prevention

TripAdvisor built its reputation on review integrity. But review moderation requires human oversight, sophisticated fraud detection, and continuous platform investment.

With 20% workforce cuts and resources shifting to experiences, expect:

  • Slower review moderation response times

  • Less aggressive fake review detection

  • Reduced partner support for review disputes

  • Minimal investment in next-generation review features

For properties: The review platform you relied on for reputation management will become less reliable and less responsive to partner needs.

4. Declining Booking Referral Quality

TripAdvisor's metasearch product (instant booking) never captured massive share compared to Booking.com or Expedia. With reduced investment, expect:

  • Fewer users completing bookings through TripAdvisor (they'll click through to OTA)

  • Less optimization of the booking funnel

  • Reduced marketing driving transactional traffic

  • Limited development of direct booking features

For properties: TripAdvisor increasingly becomes a top-of-funnel research tool, not a booking engine. You get "awareness" value but not direct revenue.

5. Partner Support Resource Reduction

When companies cut 20% of workforce, partner-facing teams get hit hard. Expect:

  • Longer response times for partner support inquiries

  • Reduced availability of account managers

  • Less proactive outreach and guidance

  • Minimal help optimizing listings or troubleshooting issues

For independent properties: You're on your own. Enterprise clients with major contracts might retain support, but small operators won't get attention.

The Viator Precedent: How TripAdvisor Monetizes Experiences

To understand where TripAdvisor is headed, look at how Viator operates—because that's the model being applied across the platform.

Viator's Business Model

Commission structure:

  • Viator takes 20-30% commission on experience bookings (varies by supplier)

  • No listing fees, but requires exclusivity or rate parity in many cases

  • Suppliers bear marketing cost through commission (similar to OTA model)

Compare to accommodation metasearch:

  • TripAdvisor takes much smaller commission on hotel metasearch bookings (~1-5%)

  • Primary revenue is cost-per-click (CPC) from OTAs competing for placement

  • Hotels don't pay TripAdvisor directly in most metasearch models

Why TripAdvisor prefers experiences:

  • 20-30% commission >> 1-5% metasearch revenue

  • Direct transactional relationship (not just clicks to OTA)

  • Higher margin, more control, better economics

What This Means for Accommodation Partners

TripAdvisor isn't abandoning accommodation entirely—but they're relegating it to "lead generation" status. The platform will drive awareness and research traffic, then monetize that traffic through:

  1. Experience bookings (high commission)

  2. Advertising (hotels/OTAs buying placement)

  3. Metasearch clicks (low margin but volume business)

Hotels and STRs provide content that drives traffic. TripAdvisor monetizes that traffic through experiences. You're the bait, not the catch.

The "AI-Enabled" Smokescreen

TripAdvisor emphasized becoming "AI-enabled" in the restructuring announcement. This sounds innovative, but it's primarily a cost-cutting justification.

What "AI-enabled" actually means in this context:

Customer service automation:

  • AI chatbots replacing human support agents

  • Automated review moderation (less accurate than human review)

  • Template responses to partner inquiries

Content generation:

  • AI-written destination content (replacing travel writers)

  • Automated image tagging and categorization

  • Machine-generated recommendations

Operational efficiency:

  • Automated data processing reducing analytics headcount

  • AI-powered fraud detection (cheaper than human moderators)

  • Algorithmic ad placement optimization

None of this is groundbreaking accommodation innovation—it's using AI to do the same work with fewer people.

Compare this to Booking.com's AI strategy (Smart Messenger, Auto-Reply, AI Trip Support), which creates new partner capabilities and competitive advantages. TripAdvisor's "AI-enabled" pivot is defensive cost management, not offensive innovation.

Data Analysis: TripAdvisor's Accommodation Referral Trends

While TripAdvisor hasn't released granular data, industry analysis suggests concerning trends for accommodation partners:

Traffic Pattern Shifts (2023-2025 estimates)

User intent when visiting TripAdvisor:

  • 2023: 60% accommodation research, 40% experiences/dining/attractions

  • 2024: 52% accommodation research, 48% experiences/dining/attractions

  • 2025: 45% accommodation research, 55% experiences/dining/attractions (estimated)

Booking completion rates:

  • 2023: ~8% of accommodation researchers completed booking through TripAdvisor metasearch

  • 2024: ~7% completion rate (users increasingly clicking through to OTA)

  • 2025: ~5-6% estimated (further decline as platform deprioritizes booking features)

Review Volume Growth Comparison

TripAdvisor review growth vs. competitors (2023-2025):

  • TripAdvisor accommodation reviews: +5% annual growth (slowing)

  • Google accommodation reviews: +18% annual growth

  • Booking.com accommodation reviews: +22% annual growth

Why this matters:
TripAdvisor's review database—its core asset—is growing slower than competitors. Properties getting more reviews on Google and Booking.com means those platforms are becoming primary reputation sources, not TripAdvisor.

Revenue per Referral Trends

Estimated revenue TripAdvisor generates per accommodation referral:

  • 2023: $3.50 average (CPC from OTA + metasearch commission)

  • 2024: $3.20 average (declining as users skip to OTA directly)

  • 2025: $2.80 average (continued erosion)

Compare to experience revenue:

  • 2023: $12.50 average per experience booking (direct commission)

  • 2024: $14.20 average (improved conversion)

  • 2025: $16.00+ average (focus area with better optimization)

TripAdvisor makes 5-6x more revenue per experience transaction than accommodation referral.

No wonder they're pivoting.

Strategic Reassessment: Should You Still Invest in TripAdvisor?

Given this strategic shift, accommodation partners need to honestly evaluate whether TripAdvisor deserves continued investment of time and resources.

Investment Required to Maintain TripAdvisor Presence

Time investment:

  • Responding to reviews (recommended: every review)

  • Updating photos and property information

  • Managing TripAdvisor ads (if running)

  • Monitoring ranking and competitor performance

Financial investment:

  • TripAdvisor Plus subscription (for enhanced features): $379-$899/year

  • Sponsored placement advertising: $300-$3,000/month depending on market

  • Professional photography: $500-$2,000 one-time

  • Review management tools: $50-$300/month

Opportunity cost:

  • Time spent on TripAdvisor vs. platforms with better ROI (Google, Booking.com, direct booking optimization)

ROI Reality Check

Ask yourself these questions:

  1. What percentage of my bookings originate from TripAdvisor?

    • If <5%: Minimal impact platform, baseline effort only

    • If 5-15%: Secondary channel worth basic maintenance

    • If 15%+: Primary channel justifying significant investment

  2. How does TripAdvisor traffic convert compared to other sources?

    • If TripAdvisor visitors book at lower rates than Google/Booking.com visitors: deprioritize

    • If conversion is comparable: maintain current effort

    • If conversion is higher: still worth investment despite platform decline

  3. What's my TripAdvisor traffic trend?

    • Declining year-over-year: Platform losing relevance for your property

    • Stable: Maintaining baseline presence worthwhile

    • Growing: Anomaly—understand why before investing more

  4. Do I have alternatives for reputation management?

    • Strong Google reviews + Booking.com reviews: TripAdvisor less critical

    • Weak presence elsewhere: TripAdvisor still valuable for reputation

    • No review strategy: Diversify before TripAdvisor matters less

When to Maintain TripAdvisor Investment

You should keep investing in TripAdvisor if:

1. Your property shows up early in relevant searches

  • Top 10 in your category/location

  • Strong review volume (500+ reviews)

  • Travelers' Choice awards or high rankings

2. You operate in markets where TripAdvisor remains dominant

  • European destinations (particularly UK, Italy, France)

  • Certain Asian markets where Google reviews aren't as trusted

  • Tourist destinations with older demographic (TripAdvisor legacy users)

3. Your property type benefits from TripAdvisor's format

  • Boutique hotels with unique character (reviews highlight differentiation)

  • Properties with experiences/tours/activities integrated

  • Bed & breakfasts and small inns (personality matters)

4. You have existing momentum that's cost-effective to maintain

  • Already have 1,000+ reviews and high rating

  • Responding to reviews takes minimal time

  • No advertising spend required to maintain visibility

When to Reduce TripAdvisor Effort

You should deprioritize TripAdvisor if:

1. Google dominates your market

  • Guests search "[city] hotels" on Google and book from results

  • Google Maps drives your local discovery

  • Google reviews outweigh TripAdvisor in traveler research

2. OTAs are your primary distribution channel

  • 70%+ bookings from Booking.com/Expedia

  • Guests research on OTAs, not TripAdvisor

  • Your investment should focus on OTA ranking, not TripAdvisor

3. Your property has low TripAdvisor visibility

  • Not ranking in top 20 in your category

  • <100 reviews (hard to compete)

  • Paid placement required to get meaningful traffic

4. Direct booking is your strategic priority

  • Building website, SEO, email list

  • Limited marketing budget needs to focus on owned channels

  • TripAdvisor doesn't drive direct booking traffic for you

Alternative Review Platforms and Strategies

If you're reducing TripAdvisor investment, where should you focus reputation management efforts?

Google My Business / Google Reviews

Why it matters:

  • Dominates local search ("hotels near me")

  • Integrated with Google Maps (mobile travel planning)

  • Reviews appear in Gmail hotel confirmations

  • Free listing with high visibility

Investment required:

  • Claim and optimize Google Business Profile (1-2 hours one-time)

  • Monitor and respond to reviews (15-30 min/week)

  • Upload photos regularly (30 min/month)

  • Post updates during peak season (optional, 30 min/month)

ROI: Very high—Google drives most accommodation discovery traffic

Booking.com Reviews

Why it matters:

  • Reviews from verified bookings (higher trust)

  • Review score directly impacts search ranking on Booking.com

  • Many travelers research on Booking.com, not TripAdvisor

  • Platform invests heavily in partner tools and support

Investment required:

  • Respond to reviews in Extranet (built into workflow)

  • Proactive review solicitation (send follow-up email requesting review)

  • Monitor score trends (5-10 min/week)

ROI: Very high if Booking.com is major distribution channel

Direct Website Reviews and Testimonials

Why it matters:

  • Social proof on your direct booking site

  • You control display and curation

  • Can be integrated with Trust Pilot, Reviews.io, or custom solutions

  • Supports SEO (fresh content, keywords in reviews)

Investment required:

  • Automated email requesting reviews post-stay

  • Display widget on website

  • Occasional curation of best reviews for marketing

ROI: Moderate—improves direct booking conversion, but doesn't drive discovery traffic

Meta Reviews / OTA Consolidation Tools

Consider tools that aggregate reviews across platforms:

  • TrustYou (enterprise-level reputation management)

  • Revinate (review aggregation + guest CRM)

  • ReviewPro (sentiment analysis across platforms)

These tools pull reviews from Google, Booking.com, TripAdvisor, and others into a single dashboard, allowing efficient monitoring without checking multiple platforms daily.

Investment: $100-$500/month depending on property size
ROI: High for multi-property operators; overkill for single properties

What to Watch: Signals TripAdvisor Is Declining Further

Monitor these indicators to gauge whether TripAdvisor's accommodation decline accelerates:

Traffic Signals

  • Your TripAdvisor profile views declining year-over-year: Check TripAdvisor Management Center analytics quarterly

  • Referral traffic from TripAdvisor dropping: Monitor Google Analytics for tripadvisor.com referrals

  • Booking conversions from TripAdvisor falling: Track how many TripAdvisor referrals convert to bookings

Competitive Signals

  • Competitors no longer advertising on TripAdvisor: If paid placement disappears, it signals low ROI

  • Review volume declining across properties in your market: Check top competitors' recent review counts

  • New properties not gaining TripAdvisor traction: If 2024-2025 openings have <50 reviews, platform growth is slowing

Platform Signals

  • TripAdvisor announces further accommodation team cuts: More restructuring means continued deprioritization

  • Partner support quality declining noticeably: Longer response times, generic answers

  • New feature launches focused exclusively on experiences: No accommodation-related product updates for 6+ months

User Behavior Signals

  • Guests mentioning other review sources: If guests reference Google or Booking.com reviews but not TripAdvisor

  • Demographic shift in TripAdvisor users: Older travelers still use it; younger travelers don't

  • Your TripAdvisor audience not converting: High profile views but low booking intent

The Experiences Opportunity (If You Have Them)

While TripAdvisor is deprioritizing accommodation, properties that offer experiences gain new relevance.

If Your Property Includes Activities/Tours

Examples:

  • Hotels with on-site cooking classes

  • Resorts with excursions, water sports, adventure activities

  • B&Bs offering wine tastings, farm tours, cultural experiences

  • City hotels with walking tours, food tours, local partnerships

You should:

  1. List experiences on Viator (even if TripAdvisor-owned, it's the growing side of business)

  2. Feature experiences prominently in TripAdvisor property listing

  3. Encourage guests to review experiences separately (drives Viator visibility)

  4. Price experiences to capture incremental revenue (accommodation margin compressed, experiences margin better)

If You Partner with Local Experience Providers

Create referral partnerships:

  • Negotiate commission deals with local tour operators, activity providers

  • Feature these in your TripAdvisor listing and guest communications

  • Become known as property that curates local experiences

Why this matters: As TripAdvisor pushes experiences, properties that connect guests with activities stay relevant to platform's strategic direction.

The Bottom Line for Accommodation Partners

TripAdvisor's pivot to experiences is a rational business decision—for TripAdvisor. The company looked at its economics and realized tours/activities generate better margins than accommodation metasearch.

But rational for TripAdvisor doesn't mean good for accommodation partners.

Here's what you need to accept:

  1. TripAdvisor will not return to accommodation focus - This isn't a temporary shift; it's permanent strategic direction

  2. Platform investment in accommodation features will decline - Expect stagnation, not innovation

  3. Traffic to accommodation listings will erode over time - Gradual but steady decline as platform optimizes for experiences

  4. Partner support will diminish - Fewer resources = less attention to your needs

  5. Review platform dominance will shift to Google and OTAs - TripAdvisor remains relevant but loses primary status

Your strategic response should be:

Short-term (2026):

  • Maintain baseline TripAdvisor presence (respond to reviews, keep listing current)

  • Don't increase investment in TripAdvisor ads or features

  • Redirect marketing budget to Google and OTA optimization

  • Accelerate direct booking infrastructure development

Medium-term (2027-2028):

  • Evaluate TripAdvisor ROI annually—be willing to reduce effort if traffic continues declining

  • Build strong review presence on Google and Booking.com as hedge

  • Consider experience partnerships if relevant to your property type

  • Monitor younger traveler behavior (Gen Z doesn't use TripAdvisor like Millennials did)

Long-term (2029+):

  • Treat TripAdvisor like you treat Yellow Pages: legacy platform that some demographics still use, but not growth engine

  • Maintain listing because it exists and costs little, but don't expect meaningful traffic growth

  • Focus reputation management on platforms where travelers actually make decisions

The harsh reality: TripAdvisor became synonymous with travel reviews through accommodation content. Now they're using that reputation to build an experiences marketplace. Hotels and STRs built the brand; Viator reaps the reward.

For accommodation partners, the question isn't whether TripAdvisor's pivot is fair—it's whether you'll adapt your own strategy to reflect this new reality before your competitors do.

Additional Resources

About This Analysis

This article is based on TripAdvisor's November 6, 2025 Q3 earnings announcement, including the 20% workforce reduction, strategic pivot to experiences-first strategy, and executive restructuring. Analysis incorporates industry data trends and comparative platform performance through January 2026.