Artificial intelligence is changing what’s possible for visitor attractions — not at the level of robotics and theme park rides, but at the level of day-to-day guest communication: the questions that arrive before a visit, the calls that come in after hours, the review that never gets written because no one asked.
Here’s where AI is making the biggest difference for attraction operators right now.
In the context of visitor attractions, AI typically refers to tools that automate or enhance guest-facing communication: AI chatbots that answer website enquiries, AI voice agents that handle inbound calls, and automated systems that send post-visit review requests at the right moment.
The goal isn’t to replace the human experience at the heart of what attractions do. It’s to handle the repetitive, time-sensitive communication work that surrounds it.
The most time-consuming pre-visit communication for most attraction operators isn’t complicated — it’s relentless. Opening hours, parking, age restrictions, accessibility, what to wear. These questions arrive via website, email, phone, and social — often outside business hours.
AI chatbots trained on an operator’s specific information can handle the majority of these questions instantly, 24 hours a day, freeing staff for conversations that genuinely need a human.
For many attractions, the phone is still the primary enquiry channel. AI voice agents answer inbound calls at any time, respond to common questions in natural language, and can send booking links to callers via SMS while they’re still on the call. Every call is logged and transcribed.
Operators who welcome hundreds of guests a day often find that only a small fraction leave reviews, and those who do are disproportionately the ones who had a problem.
Automated post-visit review requests sent by SMS shortly after a guest’s experience ends capture guests at peak enthusiasm. In travel and tourism, SMS achieves a 98% open rate with an average read time of around 3 minutes — far more effective than email follow-ups sent the next day.
When common enquiries are handled by a chatbot, calls are fielded by a voice agent, and post-visit communication is automated, the demands on your human team change. They spend less time on repetitive tasks and more time creating the moments that make an attraction memorable.
The way guests discover attractions is changing. Research from Arival indicates that AI has become a top tour and attraction discovery channel for high-value travellers within the past year. Operators with strong review volumes, accurate online information, and responsive digital presences surface first.
The highest-impact starting point for most attraction operators is automated post-trip review requests. It’s the quickest win and it compounds over time. Adding an AI chatbot for pre-visit enquiries and a voice agent for after-hours calls builds out the rest of the picture.
AI is being used in visitor attractions to automate guest communication: answering pre-visit enquiries via chatbot, handling inbound calls via AI voice agents, sending automated post-visit review requests, and monitoring online reputation across multiple review platforms.
No. AI tools handle repetitive communication tasks like answering common questions and sending post-visit messages. The human elements of the guest experience — guiding, hosting, and creating memorable moments — remain the domain of your team.
The most reliable way to increase review volume is automated post-trip SMS review requests, sent shortly after a guest’s experience. SMS achieves a 98% open rate in travel and tourism, with most messages read within 3 minutes.
A strong review profile, accurate business information, and responsive guest communication all contribute to how well an attraction surfaces in AI-assisted search. AI engagement tools — particularly automated review requests and chatbots — directly support the signals that drive discoverability.