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Hotel chain named the UK’s worst for 11th year running

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Britannia has been named the worst hotel chain in the UK for the 11th year in a row.

The brand, which has more than 60 properties across the country, came bottom of the pack in 16th place in Which?’s annual survey of more tha 5,000 respondents.

It scored an “abysmal” overall customer satisfaction rating of 48 per cent, according to Which?, with those surveyed giving it just one star (out of five) for bedrooms, bathrooms and the quality of the wifi.

Britannia scored no higher than two stars in each of the remaining seven categories, including cleanliness, value for money and customer service.

Each chain was given a star-rating across the aforementioned criteria plus breakfast, bed comfort, communal areas and decor, and ‘description matches reality, and awarded an overall customer satisfaction percentage. The survey also highlighted the average price per night of a stay, and split brands into two sections for comparison: large hotel chains and small hotel chains.

Travelodge and Mercure came just above Britannia with a satisfaction score of 56 per cent each, though Mercure garnered higher star ratings across two categories (three in breakfast and wifi two Travelodge’s two and one stars respectively).

On the other end of the spectrum, Hotel Indigo and Hub by Premier Inn achieved the highest satisfaction rating of 77 per cent in the “large hotel chains” section, with Premier Inn coming in third place with 75 per cent.

In the “small hotel chains” category, top place went to Blend Collection, with 80 per cent, while Village Hotels’ score of 55 per cent saw it down at the bottom of the table.

A spokesperson for Travelodge told the Daily Mail: “Travelodge is investing significantly in our UK portfolio to deliver a high-quality, premium look and feel hotel design and a great value for money proposition to our customers. This hotel refit programme is Travelodge’s most significant brand transformation to date and is well underway across the country, with approximately £45m being invested this year to update our hotels.

“We take our guest feedback very seriously and are sorry to hear that the Which? reviewers did not receive our normal high-quality service.”

A spokesperson for Mercure said: “Our position in this survey doesn’t reflect the standard of guest experience we strive for, and we will of course look into the…

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