
Radisson Hotel Group is extending its hospitality tech stack to include one of the most underleveraged experiences in hotel ecommerce: restaurant booking. This week, Radisson announced the launch of a new online platform that allows guests and local diners to browse and reserve tables across its global portfolio of 1,900 restaurants—directly on RadissonHotels.com.
The tool supports searches by city, cuisine, and concept, and integrates rich content like menus and photography, offering a seamless, end-to-end digital dining journey. It also uses geolocation and personalized recommendations based on stay details—bringing Radisson’s digital transformation closer to full-service guest engagement, from room to table.
While the functionality is framed as a convenience for food lovers and local explorers, it’s also a strategic move: Radisson is positioning its F&B venues as standalone destinations in the eyes of consumers—and discoverable entities in the online travel and dining ecosystem.
Why It Matters:
1. It bridges the “last digital mile” in hotel dining.
Historically, hotel restaurants have lagged behind in online visibility, often buried within hotel websites or dependent on third-party platforms. This move brings restaurant booking into Radisson’s owned digital ecosystem—giving the brand more control over conversion, data, and customer experience.
2. It aligns with industrywide digital transformation trends.
From Marriott’s revamped Bonvoy dining experience to Accor’s push into F&B as a standalone vertical, major hotel groups are investing in better tech to elevate their culinary brands. Radisson’s approach—fully integrated, mobile-responsive, with geo-personalization—puts it in line with this growing trend of hotels treating restaurants as both guest amenities and local businesses.
3. It’s a content-forward ecommerce model.
By combining functionality with storytelling—like the “Taste of Heritage” culinary series—Radisson is merging marketing and booking tools. This model mimics the success of platforms like Resy or TheFork, but within the hotel’s own digital walls. It shows that content-rich UX can drive transactions, especially when built around emotion (local food culture) and convenience (real-time booking).
4. It prepares Radisson for AI and intent-based discovery.
A searchable, structured database of global restaurants with menus, photos, and bookability positions Radisson well for future integrations with GenAI platforms and voice search, where context-rich, hyper-local content will increasingly shape travel decision-making.