Staynex Wants to Kill Hotel Commissions — and Tokenize What’s Left
Staynex Wants to Kill Hotel Commissions — and Tokenize What’s Left
With 2.6 million hotels, a membership model that undercuts Booking.com and Expedia by design, and a $STAY token launch on April 23, Staynex is making its move on a $1.9 trillion industry that hasn’t changed its pricing logic in twenty years.
The Hidden Tax on Every Trip You Book
Every time you book a hotel through Booking.com, Expedia, or any major online travel agency, somewhere between 20 and 25 percent of what you pay quietly disappears into a commission the platform collects from the hotel. You don’t see it as a line item. The hotel buries it in the rate. And because every OTA does the same thing, there’s nowhere else to go — until now.
Staynex, a Web3 travel membership platform, is building around a fundamentally different premise: cover operating costs through a flat membership fee, charge zero commission on bookings, and pass the savings directly to the traveller. It is, as the company’s leadership describes it, the Netflix model applied to travel — and it arrives at a moment when the technology required to make it work has finally caught up with the idea.
“If you travel and book through them, you probably overpaid maybe 20 to 25 percent,” says Michael Ros, CEO of Europe at Staynex and founder of Sleap.io, which was acquired by Staynex earlier this year. “If you could save on travel, why not. We don’t charge commissions, we charge a membership fee — a small fee which is normally paid after one reservation.”
OTA commission on every booking
Hotels available on Staynex
$STAY TGE launch date
Why the Subscription Model Wins in Travel
The economics are straightforward. A traveller booking a $500 hotel stay through a standard OTA is effectively absorbing $100 to $125 in commission costs, passed through in the rate. A Staynex membership, paid once, costs less than the savings on a single average booking. Travel twice a year and the arithmetic becomes difficult to argue with.
The deeper point, though, is structural. The reason Booking.com and Expedia charge 20 to 25 percent is not greed — it’s overhead. Both companies carry enormous fixed costs: tens of thousands of employees, global customer support infrastructure, continuous user acquisition spending. Every new customer they acquire costs them money, so they need to extract maximum value from every transaction.
Staynex is designed from the ground up to avoid that trap. A smaller team, AI-native infrastructure, and a membership model that creates an ongoing relationship with the user rather than a one-off transaction all reduce the cost base dramatically. “By being a disruptor, building the organisation more smartly, and just having a membership model, we can sustain and give the benefits back to the user, the hotels, or both,” Ross explains.
“The technology with AI means you don’t have to build a team of thousands of people. You can do it with tens of people and just disrupt the giants.”
The Netflix analogy holds further than just pricing. Netflix succeeded not merely because it was cheaper than buying DVDs, but because it created a different kind of relationship with its audience — one built on ongoing value rather than per-transaction extraction. Staynex is betting the same dynamic applies to travel: give members consistent savings, build loyalty, reduce churn, and avoid the escalating acquisition costs that force OTAs to keep their commissions high.
The Sleap.io Acquisition and Global Reach
The acquisition of Sleap.io, completed in April 2026, was strategic rather than opportunistic. Sleap had spent three years building its membership infrastructure and travel inventory with a focus on Western markets, accumulating partnerships with Coinbase, Gate and a range of other crypto-native platforms. Staynex had built its strength in Asian markets. The combination created a genuinely global footprint almost overnight.
Ross, who founded Sleap after a 15-year career in travel technology — spanning the web1 era of physical travel agencies through to web2’s OTA giants — brings direct experience of what it takes to scale a travel platform. His previous venture built a successful membership model but required a large team to sustain it. Sleap was his attempt to do the same with fewer people and crypto-native infrastructure. The Staynex acquisition gave him the team, the tokenomics and the Asian market coverage to make the bigger vision viable.
The combined inventory stands at 2.6 million hotels. For context: Booking.com, as a Dutch startup, took five years to get hotels listed outside the Netherlands. Staynex and Sleap together have reached global coverage in under three years, a compression of timeline that reflects how different the technology environment is today from the one that shaped the web2 incumbents.
Asian markets, tokenomics, membership infrastructure
Western markets, crypto-native partnerships, booking tech
2.6 million hotels globally across both platforms
Under 3 years (vs. 5+ years for Booking.com)
What’s Actually On-Chain — and What Isn’t Yet
Staynex is candid about the gap between its Web3 vision and where the broader travel industry currently sits. Both platforms accept fiat payment — travellers who prefer to pay by card can do so, though they pay a small additional fee to cover payment processing costs. Crypto payment is available for those who want it, but it is not mandated. The Web3 elements are additive, not a prerequisite for using the platform.
What exists today: tokenized membership tiers, token-gated discounts for holders, and crypto payment rails for those who want them. What is being built toward: NFT-based reservations that the traveller actually owns, transferable and potentially tradeable on secondary markets.
The NFT reservation concept addresses a genuine consumer pain point. Under the current OTA model, when you book a hotel, you don’t own the reservation — the platform does. Cancellation terms, refund policies and what happens when you need to change plans are all governed by the platform’s rules. A reservation minted as an NFT changes that relationship fundamentally: you hold the asset, and you decide what to do with it, including reselling it if your plans change.
“If you make a reservation and you’re not able to travel or want to give it to someone else, it’s your reservation,” Ross explains. “If you booked a hotel near Coachella and the hotel prices went up, you could resell it for more. It’s up to you. You paid for something.”
Beyond reservations, Ross points to payments fraud as a significant industry problem that blockchain naturally resolves. Credit card chargebacks and disputed bookings cost the hotel industry billions annually. Crypto payments, once authorized, are irreversible — the fraud vector largely disappears.
The $STAY Token and the Loyalty Problem It Solves
Traditional hotel loyalty programs are, by design, closed ecosystems. Hilton Honors points work at Hilton properties. Hyatt points work at Hyatt properties. The largest hotel groups in the world operate fewer than 10,000 properties each — out of a global inventory of millions. For most travellers, the loyalty program that covers the hotel they actually want to book is not the one they have points in.
The $STAY token is designed to solve this by creating a single loyalty layer that works across every hotel on the Staynex platform — all 2.6 million of them. Book any hotel, earn $STAY. Hold $STAY, unlock additional membership perks. The token is liquid and exchangeable, not locked to a single brand’s redemption schedule or subject to expiry policies set by a corporate loyalty team.
The former founder of Priceline and Booking.com — an $80 billion combined enterprise — has joined Staynex as a chairman, lending institutional credibility to the project at a moment when many Web3 travel ventures have struggled to bridge the gap between crypto-native users and mainstream travellers.
“You can get perks on every hotel you book, not just one brand — not only a thousand hotels out of 2.6 million.”
April 23 TGE: A Running Platform, Not a Fundraise
The $STAY Token Generation Event is scheduled for April 23, 2026. The distinction Staynex draws is important: this is not a fundraise to build a product. Both platforms are fully operational. Hotels can be booked today. The token launch is an additional layer on top of a functioning business — an incentive structure for the community, not a prerequisite for the platform to exist.
That sequencing matters in a market where TGE-first, product-second projects have repeatedly disappointed. Staynex arrives at its token launch with a live platform, a global hotel inventory, an AI-powered booking assistant in development, and a combined team that spans Western and Asian markets. The token creates alignment between the platform’s growth and the financial interests of its early community — but the platform does not depend on the token to function.
For travellers considering the platform regardless of the token, the core value proposition is unchanged: a membership fee that pays for itself on the first booking, access to 2.6 million hotels at rates that don’t include a 20 to 25 percent OTA markup, and the option to pay in crypto if that’s preferable. Web3 mechanics are available for those who want them; they’re not a barrier for those who don’t.
The travel industry has been due for disruption since the web2 OTA model calcified around commission-based pricing fifteen years ago. Staynex is not the first company to notice that — but it may be the first with the inventory, the team and the timing to do something about it.
Learn more about $STAY: staynex.vip/stay-token | Become a Staynex Founder: token.staynex.vip | Refinitiv TV (LSEG): lseg.group/4tfPxlr
