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Agentic Hospitality launches new server connecting AI and reservation systems

Agentic Hospitality has announced the launch of its Travel Operating System (TravelOS) Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server, a new infrastructure layer designed to connect hotel reservation systems directly to AI platforms. The system enables hotels to surface real-time availability, rates and inventory inside AI assistants and conversational interfaces while maintaining full control over pricing, reservations and guest relationships.

The launch responds to a broader shift in travel discovery and booking behavior. As travelers increasingly research and plan trips through AI tools, hotels are facing a new distribution layer that sits outside traditional websites, search engines and online travel agencies.

Agentic Hospitality’s TravelOS MCP Server enables hotels to participate directly in that emerging environment without duplicating inventory, scraping rates, or creating secondary booking systems. Instead, the platform connects directly to a hotel’s central reservation system (CRS) and property management system (PMS), which remain the authoritative system of record.

“Hotels have invested heavily in the systems that run their operations,” said Brad Brewer, chief AI officer of Agentic Hospitality. “Our approach is simple. We extend those systems into AI platforms rather than replacing them. Hotels keep their pricing control, inventory authority, and direct relationship with the guest.”

Unlike chatbot tools or marketing overlays, the TravelOS MCP Server operates as an infrastructure layer that orchestrates structured hotel data for AI consumption. Availability, room details, policies and rate information are retrieved in real time from the hotel’s operational systems and delivered into AI environments in a structured format.

Because reservations route back through the hotel’s system of record, operators retain control over pricing logic, inventory management and guest data. The architecture avoids the operational risks associated with duplicated rate environments or intermediary booking layers.

For hotel owners and operators, the shift reflects a new phase of travel distribution. “AI is becoming a discovery and transaction surface for travel,” Brewer said. “If hotels do not connect their authoritative systems into that layer, someone else will sit between them and the guest.”

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