the hospitality lead source: search restaurants, hotels or attractions by type and location, and get back each business's real contacts — emails pulled from their own website — plus the TripAdvisor context (rating, reviews, price range, cuisines) that tells you who they are.
If you sell to restaurants, hotels or attractions — POS systems, reservation software, food distribution, marketing services — TripAdvisor is the most complete directory of your market that exists. But it's a directory of listings, not contacts.
This Actor bridges that gap: it crawls TripAdvisor search results and detail pages for the business data, then visits each business's actual website and extracts the published emails from contact pages, footers and mailto: links, plus phones and social profiles.
Each lead arrives with its TripAdvisor context attached — rating, review count, price range, cuisines — so you can segment before the first call: the struggling 3.5-star spots get the reputation pitch, the busy 4.5-star ones get the capacity pitch. $0.05 per lead.
business type + location in, contactable hospitality leads out. runs on Apify, $0.05 per lead.
searchTerms takes business categories ("Italian restaurants"), locations takes geographic areas in city, state format, and contentType picks the vertical: restaurants, hotels, or attractions. maxResults caps each search.scrapeEmails on, the Actor opens each business's own site and extracts published emails from contact pages, footers and mailto: links; scrapeSocials adds Facebook, Instagram, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, YouTube and TikTok profiles.contact data plus the TripAdvisor context that makes hospitality outreach specific instead of generic.
contacts · emails (from the real website), phone, website URL, and six social platforms.
identity · business name, category, full address, and the TripAdvisor URL for reference.
reputation · TripAdvisor rating and review count — the instant segmentation axis for reputation-sensitive pitches.
restaurant specifics · price range and cuisines — target "Italian, $$-$$$" instead of "restaurants" and your copy writes itself.
verticals · one contentType switch covers all three: restaurants, hotels, and attractions.
a reservation-platform sales team pulls "Italian restaurants" across five tourist cities, segments by price range ($$+ spots are the buyers), and emails the addresses each restaurant publishes on its own site. the rating field adds the angle: high-rated busy spots hear about table-turn optimization, lower-rated ones about review recovery.
run frequency: per city/vertical · 100 leads ≈ $5
a specialty food importer needs exactly the restaurants that serve their category. cuisines ships on every restaurant lead — filter to "Japanese" across a metro area and the prospect list matches the product line by construction, with the chef-reachable contact attached.
run frequency: quarterly per region · cuisine-filtered after export
flip contentType to hotels or attractions and the same machinery serves tourism marketing agencies: every property with its rating, review volume and real contacts. pairs with the catalog's Hotel Review Sentiment Actor when the pitch needs reputation analysis on top of the contact.
run frequency: per campaign · same $0.05/lead across verticals
honest comparison against the common alternatives.
| data-runner.dev | listing-only scrapers | manual research | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Email source | business's real website | TripAdvisor page only | human browsing |
| Emails on listings | n/a — goes to the source | TripAdvisor rarely shows emails | n/a |
| Hospitality context | ✓ rating, reviews, price range, cuisines | ✓ same listing data | ✓ at human speed |
| Three verticals | ✓ restaurants, hotels, attractions | varies | ✓ |
| Socials | ✓ six platforms | rarely | if noted down |
| Speed | hundreds per run | hundreds per run | dozens per day |
| Price | $0.05/lead | varies | paid in hours |
no subscription. no minimums. pay only for what you extract.
each lead includes contacts from the business's real website plus the TripAdvisor layer: rating, review count, price range and cuisines. example: 100 leads ≈ $5.
new to Apify? you get $5 in free credits on signup — that's ~100 hospitality leads before you spend a cent.
run on Apify →how it works, what it costs, what's legal, and how it handles edge cases.
From each business's own website — the Actor crawls TripAdvisor for the business data, then visits the linked site and extracts published addresses from contact pages, footers and mailto: links. TripAdvisor listings themselves rarely expose emails, which is why listing-only scrapers come back dry.
Three verticals via the contentType setting: restaurants, hotels, and attractions. Restaurant leads additionally carry price range and cuisines; all leads carry rating, review count, address, phone, website and the TripAdvisor URL.
The Actor's documentation publishes no hit-rate claim for this vertical, and we won't make one up. As a rule of thumb from how hospitality sites work: independents tend to publish contacts, chains often route to corporate forms. Run a small test batch on your specific niche and city before committing to volume — the $5 free credits cover exactly that.
Indirectly and precisely: searchTerms accepts specific categories ("Italian restaurants", "sushi"), and every restaurant lead ships with its cuisines array and price range — so you filter after export. A food distributor targeting Japanese restaurants in Miami gets a list that matches the product line by construction.
Yes — switch contentType and the same pipeline applies: TripAdvisor data plus real-website contact extraction. Hotel leads suit suppliers and tourism-marketing agencies; attractions suit ticketing and experience platforms.
With scrapeSocials on, each lead carries whatever Facebook, Instagram, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, YouTube and TikTok profiles its website links — useful as fallback channels for businesses that publish no email, and for warming outreach before a call.
As your segmentation axis. High-rated, high-volume spots are thriving businesses for capacity and growth pitches; 3.0-3.9 ratings flag reputation-sensitive prospects for review-management offers. The data ships on every lead — the playbook is yours.
$0.05 per lead. restaurants, hotels and attractions — with the contacts their websites publish.