Classification of hotels
The classification of hotels is a vast and complex subject to
discuss. The literature review on the hospitality industry revealed that there
are numerous criteria and programmes used to classify hotels. There are such programmes
used at a national level, at an international level, criteria set by public
authorities or by private companies. (Minazzi, R.,2010)
In this report the author will describe a number of hotel
classification criteria found in the literature review.
In UK there are only 2 organisations qualified to award stars
to accommodation businesses: the AA (Automobile Association) and Visit England.
The Automobile Association ‘introduced a star rating system
to classify hotels in 1912, and in 2006’ they ‘developed Common Quality
Standards (alongside the main tourist boards) for inspecting and rating
accommodation.’(TheAA.com)
According to the standards aforementioned, there are three
types of awards:
The star rating is offered depending on the type of services
provided by the accommodation. ‘For full accreditation, hotels must annually undergo an overnight
inspection and pay a fee of between £624 (for a one-star hotel) and £2,123 (for
a five-star hotel).’ (Which.co.uk, 2020)
The one-star hotels are open seven days per week, each bedroom must have
a private bathroom or en suite. The restaurant is open seven days a week,
serving breakfast every morning and dinner only five evenings out of seven. These
are small hotels, with a reduced number of rooms, services may be limited.
The two-star hotels are usually small to medium in size. Compared to the
1 star hotels, the two star ones may offer slightly better services: the staff
may be more professional, the restaurant should serve dinner every evening.
The three-star hotels show a significant increase in the quality of services
offered to the public. More rooms, better trained staff, a decent level of
comfort are just a few extras. Bedrooms are all en suite, better equipped with
hair dryer and toiletries. The restaurant is open to the public as well, not
just for those staying at the hotel.
The four-star hotels should offer ‘high enough ratio of staff to guests
to provide services like porterage, 24-hour room service, laundry and
dry-cleaning. The restaurant will demonstrate a serious approach to its
cuisine.’ (Kumar, 2020) ‘Services should be formal, well supervised and
flawless in attention to guests’ needs, without being intrusive.’ (Kumar, 2020)
In addition to the three-star hotels, the four-star ones are ‘offering guests
luggage assistance, 24-hour
room service including a cooked breakfast, thermostatically controlled showers’. (BBC.co.uk)
The five-star hotels offer to their guests ‘enhanced services e.g. valet
parking, escort to bedrooms, proactive table service in bars and lounges and at
breakfast, ‘concierge’ service, 24-hour reception, 24-hour room service, full
afternoon tea.’(Narehotel.co.uk, 2019)
Other criteria for hotel classification, according to SETUPMYHOTEL.com :
1.
Number of rooms
Levels of service
3. Ownership type and affiliations
4. Target
markets
5.
Levels of service
In conclusion, the literature review on this subject
is very vast, this paper only presents the most common used criteria for
accommodation businesses classification.
References
Bbc.co.uk, ‘Bitesize: The star rating system’, [ONLINE]
available at https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/zvjm47h/revision/3,
accessed at February 20, 2021
Kumar, P.,2020. ‘Criteria for star classification of hotel
(Five, four, three, two, one & heritage)’, [ONLINE] available at https://hmhub.me/criteria-star-classification-hotel-five-four-three-two-one-heritage/,
accessed at February 20, 2021
Israeli, A., 2002. ‘Star rating and corporate affiliation:
their influence on room price and performance of hotels in Israel’, [ONLINE]
available at https://www.academia.edu/1390076/Star_rating_and_corporate_affiliation_their_influence_on_room_price_and_performance_of_hotels_in_Israel,
accessed at March 1st, 2021
Minazzi, R.,2010, ‘Hotel Classification Systems: A
Comparison of International Case Studies’,[ONLINE] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228645808_Hotel_Classification_Systems_A_Comparison_of_International_Case_Studies,
accessed at March 1st, 2021
Narehotel.co.uk (2019), ‘UK Hotel Star Rating System’,
[ONLINE] available at https://www.narehotel.co.uk/uk-hotel-star-rating-system,
accessed at March 2nd, 2021
The AA Hotel and Hospitality Services, ‘Ratings and Awards’,
[ONLINE] available at https://www.theaa.com/hotel-services/ratings-and-awards,
accessed at January 2nd, 2021
Setupmyhotel.com, ‘Types of
Hotels or Classification of hotels by their type’, [ONLINE] available at
https://setupmyhotel.com/train-my-hotel-staff/front-office-training/76-classification-of-hotels.html#:~:text=Hotel%20targets%20many%20markets%20and,casino%2C%20convention%20and%20conference%20hotels,
accessed at March 1st, 2021
Which.co.uk, (2020), ‘Hotel star ratings explained’,
[ONLINE] available at https://www.which.co.uk/reviews/uk-hotel-chains/article/hotel-star-ratings-explained-a0bgV3M8kfx2,
accessed March 2nd, 2021