The Code
Certification:
Hotel Staff
Trained Against
Child Trafficking
The Code
Certification:
Hotel Staff
Trained
Against Child
Trafficking
CERTIFICATION ISSUING BODY | ECPAT INTERNATIONAL (END CHILD PROSTITUTION AND TRAFFICKING),
SUPPORTED BY THE UNWTO AND WTTC
The Code Certification – Ethical Travel Compliance to Combat Child Trafficking
The Code Certification – Ethical Travel Compliance to Combat Child Trafficking
The Code is a voluntary set of industry-supported actions that train hotel staff to prevent child sex trafficking in hospitality. By signing and complying with The Code, hotels take an auditable stand against exploitation, turning frontline awareness into a global force for protection.
Importance:
The travel and tourism industry, while facilitating global connection, is also at risk of being misused by traffickers. Hotels are among the first places where exploitation can occur unnoticed—especially at check-in. The Code, created by ECPAT, operationalizes ethics: providing training, policies, and accountability to ensure every staff member plays a role in child protection.
Benefits:
Hotels that certify through The Code reduce legal liability, strengthen ethical brand value, and increase staff ability to act confidently and lawfully when red flags arise. Participation is often required or recommended by international travel buyers, UN-aligned tourism boards, and government contracts.
Risks of Non-Compliance:
Failure to detect or act on child exploitation—especially when staff are untrained—can result in global headlines, legal exposure, criminal investigations, or loss of brand equity. Even an unverified incident can prompt booking cancellations, protests, or activist scrutiny.
To build internal hotel protocols and staff training that prevent the sexual exploitation of children in travel-related infrastructure.
Adoption of a corporate policy, staff training in all guest-facing and security roles, introduction of standard procedures to handle suspicious activity, reporting mechanisms, public visibility of ethical stance (e.g., signage), and annual reporting of compliance efforts.
The Code’s 6 Criteria (ECPAT), UNCRC (United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child), UNWTO Global Code of Ethics for Tourism, OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct.
Hotel Job Titles Affected:
Front Desk Staff, Concierge, Bell Staff, Housekeeping Supervisors, Security Teams, Guest Services Management, Night Audit/Managers on Duty.
Why These Roles Are Involved:
They are often the first to observe unusual booking behaviors, adult-minor dynamics, or requests that raise red flags. Empowering them with protocol ensures safety, legality, and appropriate action.
Training Requirements:
Completion of The Code’s training modules (online or onsite), annual refreshers, internal SOP adoption, and incorporation into onboarding for all new hires.
Creates a proactive culture of responsibility at the frontline. Reduces incidents, strengthens interdepartmental communication (e.g., between front desk and security), and fulfills ESG commitments. Also supports compliance with ethical sourcing requirements in public contracts.
Saves cost by preventing re-dosing errors, reducing water waste, and ensuring efficient system uptime across aquatic assets.
Non-compliance with The Code Certification leaves travel and hospitality companies vulnerable to legal action, reputational damage, and potential complicity in child trafficking by failing to implement proper safeguards and training. It can result in contract loss, regulatory penalties, and irreversible public trust erosion.
Example:
A major hotel brand faced global backlash after guests reported suspected trafficking behavior that staff failed to act on due to lack of training. Lawsuits followed, along with executive resignations, and permanent reputational damage—even though the incident was later deemed unconfirmed.
Today’s guests, especially Millennials and Gen Z travelers, expect ethical operations. Displaying The Code’s participation in lobbies or check-in areas increases trust and emotional alignment. Travel consortia and B2B buyers increasingly select hotels with anti-trafficking protocols in place.
Blockchain-backed QR codes offer verifiable guest assurance of anti-exploitation measures.
Staff trained under The Code report higher situational awareness, moral confidence, and purpose. Training supports their well-being as frontline defenders of vulnerable populations. Also serves as leadership material for promotions and public-facing guest safety roles.
Certified employees are more promotable, more likely to be retained, and act as mentors for newer hires during large events.
The Code Certification trains hotel staff to detect, prevent, and report child exploitation. It transforms the front desk into a frontline of protection and is fully auditable on the StayCertified™ blockchain for ethical accountability and ESG impact.