This hotel QR code is no longer active.
The code on the in-room tower card, key-card sleeve, lobby placard, or room-service menu you just scanned was created on GlyphIQ for a property that has since retired it. The front desk chose to retire the code rather than leave guests routing to a stale amenity page.
Why this happened
Hotels rotate the in-room offering — breakfast hours change, the valet rate updates, a renovation closes a wing, the spa launches a new treatment menu. When a property retires the code, GlyphIQ routes scans here rather than to a stale amenity page.
QR codes in hospitality
Every hotel and resort runs printed QR codes across every guest surface — in-room tower cards link to the breakfast menu and occupancy-driven amenity hours, key-card sleeves carry valet instructions and Wi-Fi credentials, lobby placards point at the concierge's local guide, suite welcome packets route to room-service ordering, elevator signage carries fitness-center hours. Each is printed in bulk and stays in circulation across reservations. Most QR platforms stop responding the instant a property changes its PMS or stops paying, which strands every guest who scans a tower card weeks after a renovation. GlyphIQ keeps codes recognized after a property retires them so a tower card from last year's valet rate still routes somewhere intentional. Front desks can update destinations as the property's offering rotates without reprinting.
For hotel operators
If you run a property, manage a front-desk team, or oversee a chain's in-room collateral and want tower cards and key-card sleeves that route somewhere clean after a refresh, GlyphIQ keeps the same printed card live across reservations. Retire it when the offering shifts.