Cybersecurity statistics about hotels
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66% of hotel IT and security executives expect a rise in attack frequency during the summer 2025 travel season.
4 in 10 executives (which is 40%) at hotels say that 16-25% of their total IT budget is devoted to cybersecurity.
Fewer than 50% of hotels have deployed advanced defenses like vulnerability scanning, automated data backups, or integrated ransomware protection.
Adoption of dark web monitoring among hotels is 26%.
58% of hotels were targeted by five or more attacks during summer 2024.
26% of hotel IT and security leaders say an influx of seasonal employees unfamiliar with cyber policies and best practices increases risk.
66% of hotels are investing in VPNs.
12% of hotel IT and security leaders said an attack could lead to hotel closure.
50% of hotel IT and security executives expect an increase in attack severity during the summer 2025 travel season.
32% of hotel IT and security leaders say a significant increase in credit card transactions will increase their cybersecurity risk during the busy travel season.
40% of hotel IT and security leaders say outdated technology increases their cybersecurity risk.
42% of hotel IT and security executives say weaknesses in third-party systems like payment processors and booking platforms increase their cybersecurity risk.
Adoption of penetration testing among hotels is 28%.
30% of hotels do not have plans to outsource to a managed security service provider (MSSP)
72% of hotels are investing in next-gen antivirus, anti-malware, and anti-spam.
72% of hotel IT and security executives identified payment systems and point-of-sale (POS) technology as the most vulnerable guest-facing technology.
56% of hotel IT and security executives identified guest Wi-Fi as a most vulnerable guest-facing technology.
16% of hotel IT and security leaders struggle to fill cybersecurity job vacancies.
48% of hotel IT and security executives are not confident in their staff's ability to reliably identify and respond to sophisticated AI-driven cyberattacks and deepfakes.
26% of hotel IT and security leaders report limited in-house cybersecurity expertise.