This summer, more travelers ditch the single-property mindset and book two or more hotels on a single trip, not out of necessity but by design. More than half of travelers now deliberately build multi-hotel itineraries, treating the stay itself as part of the destination experience. The result is a richer, more local way to travel that changes how people think about booking a hotel.

Social buzz around “hotel hopping” has surged more than 1,100% year-on-year, suggesting it has become far more mainstream than a niche booking behavior. The motivations are straightforward: half of hotel hoppers choose the approach to experience different neighborhoods, while 35% use it to unlock better nightly rates. City breaks, island escapes and event-driven travel, such as concerts and festivals, are the most common triggers. Gen Z and millennial travelers lead the charge, with almost 1 in 4 treating bleisure trips as the perfect canvas for a multi-property stay. Flexibility, value and discovery drive decision-making in ways a single hotel simply can’t cover.
Tokyo: From Ryokan calm to Shibuya energy
Few cities reward hotel hopping quite like Tokyo, where the gap between neighborhoods is also a gap between moods, aesthetics and a century’s worth of architectural history. Starting a trip at Cya Shitsu Ryokan Asakusa in the city’s oldest district puts travelers inside a working traditional inn, steps from Senso-ji Temple and the kind of morning quiet that central Tokyo rarely offers. Midway through a trip, the move to Hotel Indigo Tokyo Shibuya drops guests into the city’s highest-energy neighborhood, a deliberate gear change that makes the contrast feel like two separate trips stitched together.
London: From Soho to Richmond Green
London’s hotel hopping appeal is geographic as much as atmospheric. Broadwick Soho puts guests at the center of one of the city’s most densely packed cultural neighborhoods, with galleries, restaurants and bars all within a few blocks. Moving to The Petersham in Richmond for the back half of a trip trades that density for the Thames towpath, a Victorian hotel dining room with river views and a pace that feels genuinely removed from central London. The two properties are about 30 minutes apart by train.
Honolulu: 2 sides of O’ahu
The drive from Ko Olina to Waikiki takes less than an hour, but the two feel nothing alike. The Four Seasons Resort O’ahu at Ko Olina sits on the quieter west side of the island, built around sheltered lagoons and well away from the tourist corridor. Shifting to Wayfinder Waikiki for the second half of a stay brings travelers into Honolulu’s famous beach scene, with world-renowned surf breaks, open-air dining along the Ala Wai Canal and Waikiki Beach two blocks away.
Paris: From the 1st Arrondissement to the 10th
In Paris, neighborhood identity is sharp enough that two hotels a metro ride apart can feel like different cities. Beginning at Hotel Regina Louvre puts guests in the classical heart of the city, facing the Louvre with Tuileries Gardens just alongside and the Palais Royal a short walk away. The move to La Planque Hôtel in the 10th sends them east toward the Canal Saint-Martin and Rue Oberkampf, the city’s most lively dining and nightlife corridor, where the food is better and the prices are lower.
The accommodation is the trip
The hotel hopping surge fits a vast pattern in how travelers spend. The top motivation for leisure travel in 2026 is to rest and recharge, and a single property anchored in one neighborhood rarely delivers on every dimension of that. Travelers spend more carefully on accommodation and expect more from each stay. Hotel hopping is the logical extension of both; a deliberate sequence of properties, each chosen for what it does best.
Jennifer Allen is a retired chef turned traveler, cookbook author and nationally syndicated journalist; she’s also a co-founder of Food Drink Life, where she shares expert travel tips, cruise insights and luxury destination guides. A recognized cruise expert with a deep passion for high-end experiences and off-the-beaten-path destinations, Jennifer explores the world with curiosity, depth and a storyteller’s perspective. Her articles are regularly featured on the Associated Press Wire, The Washington Post, Seattle Times, MSN and more.