Following a wave of UK media reports warning of rising bed bug infestations as Christmas travel accelerates, hospitality experts say the coverage highlights a broader, travel-driven reality that hotels can no longer address through one-off responses alone.
The warnings come as travel volumes reach historical highs. According to the UK Civil Aviation Authority, aviation is on track for the busiest Christmas travel period on record, following a record-breaking summer, significantly increasing the movement of passengers, luggage, and personal belongings across destinations nationwide.
Against this backdrop, as published on Reuters, the Mirror, and the Daily Mail have reported increased bed bug activity across the UK, linking the trend to higher levels of domestic and international travel during the festive period.
According to industry specialists, this coverage underlines a reality the hospitality sector has faced globally for years: bed bugs spread with people, not with poor hygiene, meaning even high-quality hotels can be exposed during busy travel periods with high guest turnover.
“Bed bugs travel with people all the way to their homes — and the hotels that are winning today are the ones that have understood that” said Martim Gois, Co-founder and CEO of Valpas. “Instead of reacting to incidents after the fact, leading hotels are now guaranteeing guest safety upfront and extending guest care beyond the stay itself by ensuring they take nothing unwanted home. That shift, from emergency treatments to certified, permanent bed bug-safety, is what defines modern hospitality.”
While reporting highlights a move toward heat treatments as an alternative to repeated chemical sprays, hospitality observers note that such measures still take place after an issue has been discovered. In high-turnover environments, this reactive cycle results in repeated disruptions, room closures, operational strain, and reputational risk, particularly during peak travel periods.
Recent international incidents have renewed scrutiny of pesticide-based emergency responses used indoors. Cases reported globally, including in Turkey in November, have drawn attention to the serious health and sustainability risks linked to the misuse of chemical treatments in hotel environments.
As a result, a growing number of hotels are moving toward certified bed bug-safe stays, which guarantee permanent, room-level protection without the use of indoor pesticides. This approach removes the need for repeated emergency interventions while providing guests with visible, permanent protection as part of a hotel’s core guest promise.
Valpas defines this new industry standard through its bed bug-safe certification, now used by more than 300 hotels across 70 destinations. Every certified room is equipped with discreet, connected smart bed legs that stop bed bugs at first contact and provide continuous confirmation that the room remains protected. This allows hotels to offer guests visible, digital proof of a pesticide-free stay and the confidence to return home without unwanted risks.
The Valpas mobile app used by hotel teams and the Valpas smart bed leg — a proprietary in-room technology that stops bed bugs at first contact and keeps certified rooms protected.
“This is no longer about fixing problems,” Gois added. “It’s about leadership. Certified bed bug-safe hotels are setting a new global standard by refusing avoidable risks, toxic compromises, and outdated practices. They are proving that guest care, sustainability, and performance go hand in hand.”
As Christmas travel continues and public attention remains high, industry observers expect certified bed bug-safe hotels to become an increasingly visible benchmark for guest safety, sustainability, and trust across the hospitality sector.