AI & Automation·Feb 25, 2026·8 min read
In short
Ask five providers what an AI chatbot costs and you'll get five wildly different numbers, from €30 a month to €15,000 up front. That's not because someone is ripping you off. It's because "chatbot" covers everything from a canned FAQ widget to a system that checks live room availability and takes a deposit.
So before you compare quotes, it helps to understand what you're actually paying for. There are only two buckets.
This is the work to make the bot yours: designing the conversations, feeding it your real information (rooms, menus, policies, opening hours, FAQs), matching your brand, and, the expensive part, connecting it to other systems like your booking engine or reservation platform.
Once live, a chatbot has ongoing costs: hosting, the AI usage itself (each conversation costs a small amount to process), and maintenance to keep answers current when your prices, menu or hours change.
A cheap tool front-loads nothing and charges a flat monthly fee, but you do all the work and it stays generic. A bespoke build costs more to set up but is trained on your business and plugged into your systems. Neither is "right"; it depends on what you need it to do.
At the low end, a chatbot answers repetitive questions: "Do you have parking?", "Are dogs allowed?", "What time is breakfast?", "Do you have a table for four on Friday?" It deflects the calls and emails that eat your reception's day. This is the cheapest tier, with modest setup and a small monthly fee, and for many restaurants it's genuinely enough.
One step up, the bot doesn't just answer, it collects. It takes a booking request or a group enquiry after hours, gathers the details, and drops a tidy lead in your inbox for the morning. For a hotel, capturing the 22:00 enquiry that would otherwise have gone to Booking.com is often where the money is.
At the high end, the chatbot connects to your actual booking or reservation system: it checks live availability, quotes the right rate, and completes a reservation inside the chat. This is where cost climbs, because integrating with a specific PMS or reservation platform is real engineering. It's also where a bot stops being a helper and becomes a 24/7 sales channel.
Owners fixate on the monthly fee. That's the wrong lens. The right question is: what does the bot bring in or save?
Run that against the price and the decision usually makes itself. A bot that captures one €120 room-night a week has paid for a mid-range monthly plan several times over.
This is exactly the kind of scoping we do in our AI automation service: we start from what you want the bot to achieve, then quote the level that fits rather than the most expensive one.
For a typical Belgian hotel or restaurant, a genuinely useful chatbot in 2026 is not a €15,000 project and it's not a €30 toy. A well-scoped FAQ-and-capture bot sits in a very reasonable range, and only climbs when you want live booking integration, which you should only pay for if the booking volume justifies it.
Want a straight answer for your specific setup, with no upsell? Tell us what you'd want it to handle and we'll quote the level that actually pays for itself.
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