Czechia - Hotelist

No pay-to-play, only hotels rated by AI Hotels rated by AI (by @levelsio)

What is Hotelist?

A hotel search that tries to actually find you good hotels, by @levelsio.

Most hotel booking sites today are pay-to-play. Hotels pay higher commissions to appear at the top of search results, or agree to hand over a bigger slice of the booking in exchange for placement. The "top picks" on those sites usually aren't the best hotels — they're the ones whose owners wrote the biggest checks.

Review platforms aren't much better. When almost every hotel is rated 4.5–5 out of 5, the rating stops meaning anything. Fake reviews are rampant, and multiple investigations have shown you can buy a top rating on virtually any major platform for a few hundred dollars. The whole industry has gone pay-to-play.

I'm @levelsio. I built Hotelist because I was sick of this. I don't need to make a single dollar from this site. I just wanted a place to find actually good hotels for myself, and figured I might as well share it.

How Hotelist rates hotels

Hotelist aggregates ratings from every booking site and review platform it can find, but the real secret is the AI.

AI reads what actual travelers say. Hotelist's AI scours the web — internet forums, travel communities, real trip reports, social media — pulling out what actual humans say about a hotel, not the sanitized reviews the hotel's marketing team tried to plant. The AI summarizes the consensus into honest pros and cons you can trust.

AI looks at the photos. Using vision AI, Hotelist analyzes the actual room photos — not the touched-up marketing shots — and scores each hotel on cleanliness, newness, amenities, and ambiance. A photo of a cramped room with a sagging bed speaks louder than any 5-star review.

Amenities get verified. Hotels claim to have a gym, but is it one treadmill in a closet or a real gym with weights? Hotelist's AI cross-checks claimed amenities against the actual photos, so you can filter on real things that matter: a gym with actual weightlifting equipment, a coworking desk in the room, fast wifi, a kitchen that isn't just a microwave, a bathtub that exists. None of that is possible on traditional booking sites.

Because everything runs on AI — no hotel PR teams, no paid placements, no editorial deals — nobody can buy their way to the top.

What you see on each hotel

Click any hotel to open its detail modal. You'll see:

🏩 Hotelist Score — the overall rating, combining everything below into one number.
📸 AI rating of photos — our vision AI's verdict after looking at the actual room photos.
💬 AI rating of reviews — our AI's summary of what real travelers say.
🤝 Consensus — how much the different rating sources agree. High consensus = everyone thinks the same; low consensus = there's disagreement and you should read the pros/cons carefully.
👍 Per-source normalized ratings — the rescaled 0-10 score from each individual booking/review site.

Tabs in the hotel modal also give you photos, a YouTube tour if available, pros and cons extracted from reviews, and the full amenity list.

Hotels with a Hotelist Score of 8+, a high consensus, and built in the last 10 years get an "Exceptional" badge in the grid.

How to use Hotelist

Browse by map. Drag the map or zoom in to see hotels in any area — the list on the left updates automatically.
Quick-jump dropdowns. Pick a city, country, or region from the dropdowns to fly the map there instantly.
Sliders. The histograms at the top of the list are price and rating sliders — drag the handles to filter.
Amenity filter. Find hotels with a real gym, a pool, a desk for coworking, and more — verified against the actual photos, not what the hotel claims.
Sort options. Sort by Hotelist Score, year built (newest or oldest first), or price.
Search by name. Use the search box above the list to filter the visible hotels by name.
Shareable URLs. Every city, country, region, chain, and individual hotel has its own URL: e.g. /bangkok, /thailand, /europe, /kimpton. Share them, bookmark them.

About normalized ratings

Most hotel booking and review sites have heavy rating inflation — the vast majority of hotels cluster near the top of their scale. Different sites also use different scales (some 0-5 stars, some 0-10, some 0-100). To compare sources fairly, Hotelist detects the rating range each site actually uses in practice and rescales it to 0-10. A "typical" rating on a heavily inflated site lands around 5 on Hotelist's scale, while a rare top-end outlier ends up near 10. The raw numbers still exist behind the scenes — we just stretch them out so a good hotel on one site can't look the same as an average hotel on another.

List
Map

9.5

Hotel name

Pro1
Pro2

Con1
Con2

N years ago

💵 Price / night
⭐️ Hotelist rating
13ms
Ideas + Bugs