How AI is Changing- and Personalizing- Travel Christianne Klein on FOX- Houston
- Christianne Klein

- 3 hours ago
- 3 min read

Every day, we hear about new ways artificial intelligence is being used. Now, AI is changing the way we travel- helping us save money, personalize experiences, and even make some trips safer. Recently, I had the honor of sharing insights on this emerging trend with Heather Sullivan of Fox in Houston, exploring how AI is reshaping travel for families, luxury travelers, and everyday adventurers.
Here are some of the highlights and a link to see the full interview below.
When we think about AI, our minds usually go straight to tech companies, self-driving cars, or chatbots. But in the U.S., the hospitality and dining industries have quietly been harnessing AI for years, transforming the way travelers experience hotels, restaurants, and even fast-casual chains. From luxury suites on the Las Vegas Strip to fine dining in Dubai, AI is reshaping service, personalization, and- even pricing.
In the world of luxury travel and dining, AI is increasingly viewed not as a replacement for human staff, but as a tool to enhance the guest experience. Luxury travel still depends on a human touch, and high-end establishments are using AI to personalize services, streamline operations, and empower employees to deliver exceptional service. By embracing AI this way, luxury hotels and fine dining restaurants can provide a seamless blend of cutting-edge technology and personalized attention, ensuring guests receive the best of both worlds.
Luxury hotel brands have been at the forefront of this shift, using AI to craft highly tailored guest experiences. Four Seasons, for example, has rolled out an AI-powered chatbot called “Chat,” accessible through messaging apps or the hotel’s website. It handles everything from dinner reservations to spa bookings, often anticipating questions before guests even have to ask. Marriott is leveraging AI to help event planners design customized weddings, conferences, and meetings, while Hilton uses AI to adjust room settings and recommendations for returning guests. The Peninsula Hotels take personalization a step further, tracking guest preferences from past stays- like pillow types, room temperature, or favorite beverages- to create experiences that feel not just custom, but intimately familiar.
In Las Vegas, AI is everywhere, even if you don’t notice it. Hotels on the Strip are using it to predict peak check-in times, optimize housekeeping schedules, and even anticipate high-demand dining periods, making the experience feel seamless. Guests may never know that the AI is behind the scenes, but shorter lines, perfectly timed room availability, and attentive service all stem from these invisible algorithms.
AI is making significant inroads in fine dining, not just behind the scenes but at the heart of menu creation. In Dubai, for example, the upcoming restaurant WOOHOO is built around “Chef Aiman,” a large‑language model developed by UMAI. Aiman isn’t just a tool — he helps design the menu, suggest creative flavor combinations, and even fine-tune ambiance and service.
At WOOHOO, human chefs (led by Reif Othman) taste-test and refine Aiman’s creations, balancing data-driven innovation with culinary intuition. The restaurant’s futuristic design, complete with digital installations and reactive lighting, makes dining there as much a sensory experience as a gastronomic one.
Through AI, WOOHOO can also optimize sustainability - Aiman is programmed to propose dishes that reuse food byproducts, helping reduce waste without sacrificing creativity.
Of course, AI isn’t only impacting service- it’s also changing the way we pay. Dynamic pricing, powered by AI, adjusts hotel room rates in real time based on demand, seasonality, and local events. In many places, like Las Vegas, this can mean higher rates during big conventions, but also unbeatable deals during off-peak periods. Yes, fluctuating prices can burn you (there are few things worse than realizing you spent hundreds of dollars more for the same hotel or service), but savvy planning can turn AI-driven pricing into a way to score an incredible bargain.
AI is still in its early days in hospitality, and the next year or two could bring changes we can hardly imagine. It’s no longer just working behind the scenes; it’s quietly shaping the way we travel, dine, and experience the world around us. The real challenge- and opportunity- will be for companies to embrace these technological advances while preserving the human touch that makes the experience truly meaningful.
Here is the link to our full interview with Fox in Houston with more ways AI is impacting travel and fine dining:
Christianne Klein is an Emmy® and Edward R. Murrow Award-winning TV Host, journalist, travel and lifestyle expert, and founder of FoodFamilyTravel.com.
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