According to HOTELS Magazine’s 2025 ranking of the world’s top 50 hotel groups, 21 Chinese hotel groups made the list. Jin Jiang, H World and BTG Homeinns all ranked among the global top ten, placing Chinese hotel groups in the world’s first tier by room count and property scale.

Yet a deeper contradiction is becoming increasingly apparent. China’s leading hotel groups commonly take on full-chain agency functions for foreign upper midscale brands in China—including local development, operations, franchise expansion, loyalty program rollout and risk backstopping. They have become the core channel vehicles and on-the-ground executors for foreign brands’ China expansion, rather than brand owners, standard setters or value leaders. This has created an industry paradox: scale leadership with hollow brand power.

Chinese hotel groups trade heavy asset investment, local networks and on-site operating capabilities for short-term returns, while foreign brands secure high and stable revenue shares through asset-light licensing and management output. The result is a model in which Chinese hotel groups shoulder the hard work, while foreign hotel brands enjoy the upside.

As one of the earliest sectors opened during China’s reform and opening-up, the country’s hotel industry is backed by the world’s largest lodging consumer market and one of the densest hotel networks. Yet it has still failed to cultivate world-class proprietary high-end brands that match its market scale. Industry discourse power, pricing power, standard-setting authority and data asset control remain largely dominated by foreign hotel groups. The inability to convert scale advantages into brand and value superiority has become a core bottleneck hindering the industry’s high-quality development.

With state-owned capital backing, the world’s largest consumer market and a complete industrial chain, China’s hotel sector remains trapped in a dependent predicament of scale leadership but hollow brand competitiveness. The root cause lies not in insufficient resources, but in a lack of innovation motivation and an entrenched bias toward foreign brands.

The hollowing-out of brand power is no accident. It is a systemic result of the hotel industry’s decades-long dependent growth model. Without a clear-eyed assessment of the deep flaws in this development path, the industry risks falling into a passive cycle in which the more it depends on foreign brands, the weaker its position becomes.

ChinaTravelNews