Marriott Resort Fee Lawsuit Puts New Target on Long-Held Hotel Industry Practice
Marriott Resort Fee Lawsuit Puts New Target on Long-Held Hotel Industry Practice
Marriott Resort Fee Lawsuit Puts New Target on Long-Held Hotel Industry Practice

A lawsuit pending against Marriott in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia may very well result in the company and its franchisees paying millions of dollars in restitution for resort fees that it is accused of deceptively charging guests. But it is unlikely to eliminate the practice from the hotel industry altogether, experts say.

And for those hospitality groups who do drop resort fees under this new pressure, they may opt instead to tack on amenity costs onto offered room rates to compensate for the loss of revenue from resort fees. This has dangerous implications for customers and hoteliers alike, according to Bjorn Hanson, hospitality consultant and former clinical professor at the NYU Jonathan M. Tisch Center for Hospitality and Tourism.

Guests for one will have to pay higher occupancy taxes at checkout. Hotel owners also have to contend with listing lower on third-party booking sites, such as Priceline or Expedia. Larger unit hotels will especially be at a competitive disadvantage in this scenario, as they require more in resort fees than smaller hotels with fewer perks to offer.

Examples of common amenities hotels charge customers for include access to gyms, rooftop bars, swimming pools, casino credits, transportation, newspapers, and water bottles in rooms. The problem is these sometimes are not clearly laid out to customers upon booking stays online or on guest folios, according to case documents.

“The government may use public relations as a way to get rid of amenity fees, but it’s unlikely,” said Hanson. “It’s not the government’s place to tell businesses how to price. It is their job to act in favor of the consumer, making this suit a disclosure issue.”

Road to Transparency

Regardless of the lawsuit’s result, transparency will be the real winner of the litigation, Hanson added. The case also rings the loudest alarm yet at the industry for widely deploying a strategy previously reserved for vacation destinations as recently as 2015.

“The real takeaway from this lawsuit is to have an important jurisdiction file against a big company,” said Hanson. “Other hotels will have to wait and see what happens, but other states and jurisdictions will feel that now is the time to go after them.”

Marriott is not the only hotel group benefiting from resort fees. But lawmakers are going after the chain first for the same reason one would target McDonald’s or Walmart — it is the biggest fish in the pond, according to Howard Adler, professor of hotel management and director of the Center for the Study of Lodging Operations at Purdue University.