The hidden impact of dropped calls, weak signals, and guest frustration on reviews and repeat bookings
Hotels have invested heavily in creating exceptional guest experiences, from luxury amenities and mobile check-in to digital room keys and personalized services. Yet one critical part of the guest journey is often overlooked: reliable cellular connectivity.
In today’s hospitality environment, guests arrive expecting seamless connectivity everywhere. Whether they’re joining a video conference, ordering transportation, accessing hotel services, or contacting family members, their smartphone has become central to the travel experience. When cellular coverage fails, guest satisfaction often follows.
The challenge is that many modern hotel buildings unintentionally block wireless signals. Reinforced concrete, steel structures, low-E glass, and energy-efficient construction materials can significantly reduce cellular performance, creating dead zones in guestrooms, elevators, conference areas, parking garages, and common spaces.
The Hidden Costs of Poor Cellular Coverage
Poor indoor coverage affects far more than convenience.
Guest Experience & Online Reviews

Guests rarely complain about RF signal strength directly. Instead, they leave reviews describing the property as:
- Difficult to work from
- Frustrating to navigate
- Unreliable for business travel
- Outdated compared to competing hotels
These perceptions can directly impact future bookings.
Lost Group & Business Travel Revenue
For corporate travelers and event planners, connectivity is no longer optional.
Weak cellular coverage can impact:
- Executive meetings
- Conference calls
- Hybrid events
- Convention and meeting business
Hotels that cannot support reliable communications risk losing valuable repeat business.
Operational Inefficiencies
Hotel staff increasingly depend on mobile devices for:
- Housekeeping coordination
- Maintenance requests
- Security communications
- Guest service operations
Poor coverage affects employees just as much as guests, creating delays and inefficiencies throughout the property.
Safety & Emergency Communications
Perhaps the most overlooked consequence is emergency response.
Dead zones in stairwells, elevators, underground garages, and back-of-house areas can slow critical communications during emergencies.
A properly engineered Cellular DAS provides an additional safety benefit: more accurate caller location during 911 calls. Because DAS infrastructure incorporates GPS-based network positioning throughout the building, first responders are better able to identify where a call originates—especially within large resorts, convention hotels, and multi-building properties. Wi-Fi calling, while useful, cannot always provide the same level of indoor location accuracy when every second matters.
Why the Problem Is Growing
The rollout of 5G is making indoor coverage challenges more visible.
While newer cellular networks deliver greater speed and capacity, many 5G frequencies do not penetrate modern buildings effectively. As a result, outdoor carrier investments alone are often not enough to ensure reliable indoor service.
The responsibility for indoor connectivity is increasingly shifting to the property itself.
Connectivity Is Now Part of the Guest Experience
Guests may never compliment a hotel for having great cellular coverage.
But they will remember when it doesn’t work.
Just as reliable power, hot water, and climate control are expected, seamless connectivity has become a fundamental expectation of modern hospitality. Hotels that invest in wireless infrastructure not only improve guest satisfaction—they strengthen safety, support operations, protect their reputation, and position themselves for long-term success.
In hospitality, connectivity is no longer an amenity.
It’s infrastructure.




