As the summer travel season hits its stride, a new phenomenon has taken center stage in hospitality — hotel hopping.
Unlike traditional hotel stays that last the entire trip, modern tourists are opting for shorter, multi-location itineraries, booking multiple hotels within a single destination. Fueled heavily by Gen Z and Millennials, the hotel-hopping trend promises guests a rich variety of experiences across diverse neighborhoods and accommodation types.
Nevertheless, it also presents a major technical challenge that many vacationers overlook — constantly shifting your digital environment at multiple hotels puts you at greater risk online. Every check-in represents a new network handshake, a new set of hardware vulnerabilities, and a new captive portal that could be a gateway for data harvesting.
For the tech-savvy traveler, securing your online defenses has become just as important as packing a passport.
Why is hotel Wi-Fi so bad?
To understand the risks of hotel hopping, it’s important to first grasp the basic infrastructure of hotel Wi-Fi.
Whether it’s a hostel or a five-star resort, most accommodation providers use a tiered network architecture. At the edge, you have WAPs (Wireless Access Points) that are scattered across hallways and rooms. These connect to a centralized gateway controller, which manages the captive portal, i.e., the login screen where you typically enter your room number or last name.
From a technical standpoint, these gateways are often a network’s weakest link. Since they’re designed for convenience rather than high-level security, they frequently lack client isolation. Without this, every device connected to that hotel Wi-Fi network can see every other device on it. Networks may be divided by room, wing, or floor, but you’re essentially sitting in a crowded space where everyone can observe how your device communicates with the internet.
The hotel-hopping security gap
The primary risk of hotel hopping is the sheer frequency of data exposure. Each time you join a new network, your device exchanges MAC addresses and initiates a series of background handshakes to sync emails, cloud storage, and social media updates.
And it’s all too easy to unknowingly fall victim to one of these attacks:
- Evil twin: this attack involves a malicious access point that mimics the name of a legitimate hotel Wi-Fi network (e.g., White_Lotus_Free). Guests who use an evil twin network connect directly to a hacker’s hardware and risk having their data intercepted;
- MitM (Man-in-the-Middle): in a MitM attack, once a tourist is on a compromised network, a hacker positions themselves in the middle of the connection. This allows them to monitor and even alter the data that passes between your device and the internet in real time;
- HNDL (Harvest now, decrypt later): sophisticated HNDL threats involve attackers capturing and storing encrypted data today, with the intent to decrypt it years from now using more advanced computing power that will be available then. A lapse in your tech hygiene today can lead to identity theft long after your stay has concluded.
But these risks can affect any hotel network — hotel hopping just increases your odds of running into them. So, if you stay at four different hotels over the course of your vacation instead of one hotel, you’re quadrupling your chances of encountering a misconfigured or malicious network.
Furthermore, many travelers have the auto-join option enabled on their devices. If you’re one of them, your smartphone may automatically connect to a saved network from a previous stay — or a spoofed version of it — without you even taking it out of your pocket.
Encryption: the key to happy hopping
For the modern tourist, avoiding hotel Wi-Fi for the entire trip isn’t a realistic option. After all, we all deserve to kick back after a long day of sightseeing to check emails, scroll through our socials, or stream a video or two.
A better solution is to change how data leaves your device. This is where the technical layer of a VPN (Virtual Private Network) becomes non-negotiable.
Using a high-quality VPN creates an encrypted tunnel between your device and a secure server, effectively shielding your data from the local hotel gateway. Even if the hotel network lacks client isolation or has been compromised by something like an MitM attack, for example, the data transmitted is rendered unreadable.
And in a landscape where threats like HNDL attacks are a growing concern, leveraging AES-256 encryption via a VPN is the baseline for meaningful safety online while staying at multiple hotels.
Why VPN protocols matter
Not all VPN encryption methods are created equal, especially when you’re hopping between networks of different quality every two nights or so. When moving from a high-speed downtown boutique hotel to a more budget-friendly option a few neighborhoods over, the protocol your solution uses can make or break your experience.
Here’s a breakdown of three popular VPN protocols for travelers:
- WireGuard: this option is especially lightweight and can connect almost instantly as you move between Wi-Fi and 5G. For hotel hoppers, this means your VPN tunnel is less likely to drop whenever you walk back and forth between the pool, lobby, your room, or anywhere else;
- IKEv2: IKEv2’s MOBIKE extension allows a VPN connection to stay active when a user switches IP addresses, which is a common occurrence when moving through a hotel’s various access points;
- OpenVPN: while highly secure, OpenVPN may be slow on high-latency hotel networks and struggle with frequent handoffs required during active travel across a city.
Beyond security: travel with geo-flexibility
Outside of greater security on hotel Wi-Fi, VPNs offer international travelers another interesting benefit.
Whether you’re hotel hopping or treating one accommodation as your base camp, you may find your favorite apps or streaming platforms behaving differently when you’re abroad. This is because your device is using a localized IP (Internet Protocol) address, and many online services are known to geo-block access to international visitors.
With a VPN, however, tourists can mask their IP with one from their home country, making it look like they’re surfing from their very own couch during their all-inclusive stay. This helps those traveling abroad get uninterrupted access to essential online services regardless of which hotel network they’re currently connected to.
Safer hopping for all your gadgets
Today’s traveler isn’t checking into their hotel carrying just a laptop and smartphone. A proper vacation — in one hotel or several — typically involves creature comforts like e-readers, tablets, portable gaming consoles, and more.
But just like our phones and computers, any device with internet connectivity is still a potential entry point for hackers on hotel Wi-Fi. To make matters worse, most travel IoT devices have notoriously poor security by default, relying on older protocols and out-of-date firmware. Connect them to free hotel Wi-Fi, and they just might be broadcasting their presence to anyone else on the network.
Thankfully, a VPN can help here, too. While many of us may think of a VPN as an app you need to download onto a device, top tools are flexible enough to have built-in router compatibility, protecting any device that connects to a network.
And, yes, travel routers are a thing. These pocket-sized devices can be used to connect to your hotel Wi-Fi. They’ll then create a private, VPN-protected network of their own for all your gadgets to connect to, covering anything from your Kindle to your suitcase tracker.
The hotel hopper’s tech checklist
To balance the adventure of multi-location travel with practical online hygiene, follow this technical checklist for your next trip:
- Audit your saved networks: before you leave, go into your Wi-Fi settings and forget any old public networks. This prevents your devices from accidentally connecting to a spoofed network you were previously on.
- Disable auto-join: ensure that your device asks for permission before it tries to join any new network, no matter how legitimate or harmless it may seem.
- Update your OS: plan ahead and check if your device’s operating system and apps are updated with the latest security patches.
- Enable 2FA (Two-factor Authentication): add a second layer of security to all your sensitive accounts, including email and banking. By requiring something like a one-time code over SMS or a physical key, you’re making sure that your accounts remain inaccessible, even if your password gets stolen on a shared network.
- Use a VPN: never browse the web or access apps on a hotel network without your encrypted tunnel active. Launching a reliable VPN the moment you connect is the most effective way to protect your digital footprint and keep your hotel hopping private from start to finish.
- Pack a travel router: connect your own VPN-configured router to your hotel Wi-Fi. Then, have each of your devices connect to your router’s network to steer clear of shared Wi-Fi altogether.
Privacy isn’t a travel luxury — it’s a must-have
The thread count of your hotel linens or the view from your balcony don’t mean much if you don’t have the peace of mind that comes with trustworthy online security.
As the hotel hopping trend grows, the travelers who enjoy it most will be those who treat their digital hygiene and privacy with the same care they give their physical luggage. By understanding how hotel networks work and using simple tools like a VPN, the modern adventurer can explore the world without leaving their private data behind at the hotel’s front desk.
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