Check-in is the first physical touchpoint of a guest's stay. It sets the tone for everything that follows. So when a receptionist has to apologise because they've run out of key cards — or hand over a plain white card because the branded ones are finished — that first impression takes an immediate hit.

It sounds like a minor operational hiccup. In reality, key card stockouts are a symptom of a broader supply management problem, and they have a disproportionate impact on guest perception.

The hidden cost of a stockout

Running out of key cards doesn't just inconvenience the front desk team. It triggers a chain reaction:

Why stockouts keep happening

The root cause is almost always reactive ordering. Hotels wait until stock is visibly low before placing an order. By then, lead times mean there's a gap between "we need cards" and "cards arrive" — and that gap is where stockouts live.

Common triggers include unexpected occupancy spikes, seasonal surges, card failures that increase replacement rates, and simply not having accurate records of current stock levels. Many hotels don't track key card inventory at all — they estimate based on how full the box behind reception looks.

How to prevent key card stockouts

The solution is straightforward: move from reactive ordering to proactive supply management. Here's a practical framework:

The 90-day rule: Always have at least 90 days' worth of key card stock on hand. This gives you a comfortable buffer to absorb demand spikes, delivery delays, and seasonal variations without ever reaching zero.

Managed inventory takes the guesswork out

For hotels that want to eliminate stockout risk entirely, managed inventory services handle the entire process. Your supplier tracks your usage, forecasts demand, and ships cards on a schedule — you never have to think about it.

At Connekd, our managed supply agreements include automatic stock monitoring, scheduled deliveries, and a dedicated account manager who flags potential shortages before they become problems. Your reception team gets the right cards at the right time, every time.

It's a small operational change that removes a surprisingly common source of guest dissatisfaction — and one that costs less than a single emergency order.