Africa’s hospitality scene is sprinting ahead on two fronts: guest-facing digital conveniences and serious sustainability engineering behind the scenes. From keyless entries and app-driven stays to off-grid solar arrays and desalination plants, these hotels show how hospitality tech products can sharpen comfort while shrinking footprints.
Hotel Verde Cape Town Airport, South Africa
Often dubbed “Africa’s greenest hotel,” Hotel Verde bakes technology into both the building and the operations. An intelligent property management system optimizes HVAC; regenerative-drive elevators and energy-producing gym equipment recapture power; and a PONTOS grey-water plant recycles shower water for toilet flushing. Wind turbines and solar PV assist with on-site generation, supporting 100% carbon-neutral accommodation and conferencing. It’s a rare case where the meters and the guest experience both trend greener and smarter.
Zuri Zanzibar, Tanzania
This island resort is effectively self-sufficient on water, producing it on site via wells and a desalination plant, and then purifying with ozone and UV to minimize chemicals. Rooms offer the low-energy “Evening Breeze” micro-climate system as an alternative to conventional AC, cutting electricity demand dramatically without sacrificing comfort. Zuri’s approach, recognized by EarthCheck’s Sustainable Design Gold, pairs barefoot-beach vibes with an infrastructure playbook that many mainland properties could copy.
Meliá Serengeti Lodge, Tanzania
Set on the Serengeti’s slopes, this lodge was engineered to operate largely off-grid. A sizable solar-PV array with battery storage carries the base load, while a wastewater-fed biogas system supplements power and heat. Rainwater is collected and treated for potable use, key in a remote reserve, so the property can deliver five-star comforts with minimal reliance on fossil energy. Sustainability here isn’t a brochure line; it’s the architecture of the entire operation.
Kigali Marriott Hotel, Rwanda
Kigali’s flagship business hotel layers classic five-star polish with practical tech touches: Mobile Key access via the Marriott app, fast connectivity, and rooms pre-wired with HDMI for frictionless presenting and streaming. Paired with Rwanda’s rising profile as a meetings hub, those capabilities make the property a dependable base for conferences and remote-work travelers alike.
Radisson RED, Cape Town (V&A Waterfront), South Africa
RED is Radisson’s mobile-first, app-centric brand, and in Cape Town that ethos shows up as easy app check-in and widely reported keyless room entry, plus the streaming-friendly, BYO-device setup today’s travelers expect. It’s a fun, art-forward hotel that treats your phone as the primary interface for the stay, from doors to dining.
Signature Lux by ONOMO, Sandton, South Africa
Aimed at urban travelers who prefer speed over ceremony, Signature Lux leans on automation: 24/7 self-service kiosks for check-in, a companion app for essentials, and reliable high-speed Wi-Fi in compact, well-designed rooms. It’s a crisp, cashless, queue-less model that other mid-market city hotels across the continent are beginning to emulate.
Mazagan Beach & Golf Resort, Morocco
Beyond its sheer scale, Mazagan pushes convenience through its resort app, which centralizes concierge messaging, on-property bookings, and information, shrinking the distance between guests and services to a few taps. The digital layer smooths logistics across a sprawling estate, improving service responsiveness without adding friction.
From Cape Town to Kigali and Zanzibar to El Jadida, these properties reflect a broader African trend: technology in service of both experience and sustainability. Whether you value the ease of a phone-as-key, the quiet efficiency of a building that tunes itself, or the peace of mind that your water was made on site, Africa’s high-tech hotels now deliver the lot, with style.

