Iris Scanning replacing hotel keycards?

A luxury boutique hotel in Boston (Nine Zero) have introduced iris scanning for access to their penthouse to replace a keycard.

The iris scanners are already in place for the hotel’s employees and vendors and they are planning to extend this to more guest rooms.

Whilst not an extension of the Registered Traveller programme in the US this does offer some interesting possibilities for elite travellers. If you can have a smart card which carries your passport and iris scan details which gets you through customs/immigration faster then perhaps the same card could be used to get into your hotel room. The logical extension of this is to then add the capacity to transact via the smartcard – either with it having a stored value or being used simply as a security layer to replace the credit card signature (or the room chargeback proceedure in hotels).

A concern about this system being used at Nine Zero though is security. Whilst they say they erase iris details after the guest leaves, if iris details are the identification device used for the Registered Traveller programme and if someone has both the guests details (passport number, credit card, DOB etc) which a hotel would, then what is the risk of forging Registered Traveller cards if hotels also have the iris scan details of a guest?

The eyes have it as a hotel key – Hotel Hotsheet – USATODAY.com

The Evolution of Luxury: From Gold Leaf to Inner Peace

The Evolution of Luxury: From Gold Leaf to Inner Peace

Luxury isn’t about wealth—it’s about what’s missing. From postwar security to digital-era silence, what we call “luxury” keeps evolving. This essay explores how rarity shapes desire, how the luxury industry sells emotional scarcity, and why the most coveted experiences today are often the quietest.

Airport Retail and the Psychology of Stress: What Makes Travellers Spend?

Airport Retail and the Psychology of Stress: What Makes Travellers Spend?

That overpriced chocolate bar at Gate 14 wasn’t about hunger—it was about control. In this in-depth essay, we explore how Mood Repair Theory explains airport retail behaviour, especially in high-stress domestic terminals, and what airports can learn from global best practice to meet travellers’ emotional needs.