HotelHinge · Hotel transaction intelligence
Who Owns That Hotel? How to Find Hotel Owners in Public Records
Quick answer: The brand on the sign is rarely the owner. A Marriott or Hilton flag is usually a franchise or management deal, while the real estate sits in a single-purpose LLC. You find the true owner of a hotel through three public records: the county deed (which names the current owner), the assessor's record (the taxpayer of record), and the state's business entity filing (the LLC and its registered agent).
It is a common question among acquirers, brokers, and lenders: who owns a hotel you are looking at, really? The name above the entrance almost never answers it. A hotel is an operating business wrapped in real estate, and the company that runs the brand, the company that manages the building, and the company that owns the dirt are usually three different parties. To find the hotel owner you have to separate those roles and then read the right record for each.
The three roles you have to separate
Before you can name an owner, you have to know which of three roles you are actually looking at. They are almost always held by different entities, and conflating them is the single most common mistake.
- Brand or franchisor. The company that owns the flag (Marriott, Hilton, Wyndham, IHG, and so on). Major brands operate primarily by franchising their name and systems, not by owning real estate. A flag tells you almost nothing about who owns the building.
- Operator or management company. The firm that runs day-to-day operations under a management agreement. This can be the brand, a third-party manager, or the owner itself, and it may or may not appear in any public record.
- Fee owner of the real estate. The party that actually holds title to the land and building. This is the owner in the sense that matters for a sale, a loan, or an approach, and it is the one recorded in the public record.
So when someone says they want the hotel's owner, they almost always mean the fee owner, the party on the deed, not the brand or the manager.
Where ownership is recorded
Hotel ownership records live in three public systems, and reading all three together is how you confirm an owner rather than guess at one.
- County recorder (or register of deeds). Every transfer of real estate is recorded here. The most recent deed names the grantee, which is the current owner. This is the authoritative answer to who owns the property today.
- County assessor. The assessor lists the taxpayer of record, which is normally the owner or an entity acting for the owner, along with the parcel, the assessed value, and a mailing address. That mailing address is often a thread back to the people behind the entity.
- Secretary of state (business entity filings). When the owner is an LLC or corporation, as it usually is, the state's registry shows the entity's registered agent, its formation date, and, in some states, its officers or managers.
Together these three turn a property into a named owner. The deed gives you the entity, the assessor corroborates it and adds a contact address, and the entity filing tells you who is behind that entity to the extent the state requires disclosure.
How to see past the LLC
Most hotels are held in a single-purpose LLC, an entity created to own exactly one asset and shield the principals. The entity is public, but the people behind it are not always. Here is how to push further, and where the trail can go cold.
- Follow the registered agent. The agent named in the state filing is a starting point, though a commercial agent service represents thousands of entities and will not, by itself, name the principal.
- Read the officers or managers where disclosed. Some states require an LLC to list its members, managers, or officers. Where they do, you often get a real name or a parent entity.
- Cluster related entities. Entities that share a mailing address, a registered agent, or a formation pattern frequently roll up to the same sponsor. Mapping that cluster is how you connect a nameless property LLC to a known owner.
- Read the mortgage. The recorded mortgage or deed of trust names the borrowing entity and the lender. The borrower is usually the same single-purpose entity that owns the asset, which confirms the owner and adds the financing picture.
Be candid about the limit: beneficial ownership is sometimes deliberately shielded, and a handful of states let LLC members stay private. Public records can usually identify the owning entity and frequently the sponsor behind it, but they cannot always resolve the ultimate individual. Honest research says so rather than guessing.
Why it matters
Tracing the real owner is not trivia. It changes outcomes in three concrete ways.
- Off-market sourcing. If you want to buy a hotel that is not listed, you have to reach the actual decision-maker, the fee owner, not the front desk or the brand. The deed and entity filing are how you find the party who can actually say yes.
- Lending and KYC. Lenders and their counsel have to know exactly who the borrower is, what else they own, and whether the entity checks out before underwriting a loan.
- Confirming a comp is arms-length. A sale only works as a comparable if it was an arms-length deal between unrelated parties. Checking that buyer and seller are not related entities is a core step when you find hotel sale comps, and it depends on knowing who actually stood on each side.
How to look it up, step by step
- Identify the parcel. Get the property's exact address and pull its parcel on the county assessor's site to confirm you have the right record and the taxpayer of record.
- Pull the most recent deed. On the county recorder's site, find the latest deed and read the grantee. That entity is the current owner.
- Look up the entity. Search the secretary of state's business registry for that entity to get its registered agent, status, and any disclosed officers or managers.
- Follow the threads. Cross-reference the assessor's mailing address, related entities at the same address or agent, and the borrowing entity on the recorded mortgage.
- Record the source. Note the document and link for each finding, so the ownership claim is tied to a record rather than a memory.
Brand vs operator vs owner
The table below separates the three roles, what each one does, and the record where you can find it.
| Role | What they do | Where you find them |
|---|---|---|
| Brand / franchisor | Licenses the flag, brand standards, and reservation system; rarely owns the building | The sign and the franchise disclosure, not the deed |
| Operator / manager | Runs day-to-day operations under a management agreement | Management agreement; often not in any public record |
| Fee owner | Holds title to the land and building; the party that sells, borrows, and decides | County deed, assessor record, and entity filing |
If you would rather not chase the deed, assessor, and entity registry county by county, that is exactly the gap HotelHinge fills, and the cost of doing it the expensive way is covered in How to Get Hotel Comps Without an Enterprise Terminal. The same property-first method underpins the broader How to Buy a Hotel playbook.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find out who owns a hotel?
Start with the county recorder's deed for the property, which names the current owner (the grantee on the most recent sale). Cross-check the county assessor's record, which lists the taxpayer of record, and then look up that owning entity in the state's business entity filings to find its registered agent and any disclosed officers. Those three sources, deed, assessor, and entity filing, identify the legal owner of nearly any U.S. hotel.
Is hotel ownership public record?
Yes. The transfer of real estate is recorded at the county recorder or register of deeds, the tax assessment is public at the assessor, and the owning company is registered with the secretary of state. The legal owner of a hotel is therefore public. What is not always public is the beneficial owner: the individuals behind a holding LLC can sometimes be shielded, so the entity is visible even when the people are not.
Does Marriott or Hilton own its hotels?
Usually not. Major brands like Marriott and Hilton operate primarily as franchisors and managers rather than as the owner of the real estate. A flag on the building typically means the property is operated under a franchise or management agreement, while the building itself is owned by a separate party, often a single-purpose LLC. The brand on the sign is rarely the owner on the deed.
How do you find the owner behind an LLC?
Look up the LLC in the secretary of state's business registry to find its registered agent and, where the state requires it, its officers or managers. Then follow the threads: other entities that share the same agent or address, the borrowing entity named on the recorded mortgage, and related filings. This often reaches the sponsor or principal, but not always, since some states allow members to stay private, so public records cannot always fully resolve beneficial ownership.