Remember that cute little wooden box of yours, with the hollow tubes in it, that you put up in your backyard last spring? It may not be the pollinator paradise you imagine. Bee hotels have had a real moment in the sustainability spotlight. You’ve seen them at farmers’ markets, garden centres and all over Pinterest boards dedicated to eco-friendly backyards. However, here’s the thing: buying one and nailing it on a fence post isn’t going to cut it. In fact, it might be creating problems you didn’t sign up for.What a bee hotel actually isThe concept behind bee hotels is simple. Native bees, such as mason bees and leafcutter bees, need small spaces to nest. In cities and suburbs, such natural places are often difficult to locate. Bee hotels are designed to fill that gap, providing readily available nesting spaces in areas where natural materials are scarce.A landmark 2015 study, ‘Bee Hotels’ as Tools for Native Pollinator Conservation: A Premature Verdict?, which surveyed nearly 600 bee hotels over three years, found that campaigns to save the bees often promote these devices despite a lack of solid data confirming they have a net positive effect. Some installations drew a more diverse range of species, while others told a more uncomfortable story. The structures meant to help native bees were also attracting invasive species, disease and parasites.Yes, a bee hotel can help native bees, but it can also quietly make things worse, depending on how it is handled.The part nobody tells you: maintenance is non-negotiableThis is where most well-meaning gardeners go wrong. A bee hotel is not an ornament you hang up and forget about. It’s a managed nesting structure.At their worst, bee hotels may serve as population sinks for bees. Artificially concentrating nesting sites at densities greater than natural creates ideal conditions for parasites and predators to move in and thrive. The structure meant to be a safe haven can end up accelerating the very threats it was designed to help native bees escape.Where you put it matters more than how it looksA lot of people choose a location for a bee hotel because it’s cute to see it near the herb garden, or it fits nicely on the back fence. That’s understandable, but placement should be about the bees, not the vibe.Bee hotels are most useful in areas where native bees have no natural nesting material, such as a dense urban yard or a manicured area with little bare ground or dead wood. Drop one in a garden with a good natural habitat, and it might do nothing. Placing it thoughtfully in a spot that native bees are already using can make a real difference.Placement also plays a role in how well you can monitor the hotel. If it’s hidden behind a shed you don’t visit too often, you won’t see when things go wrong.
A well-placed bee hotel can support native species, but left unmanaged, the same structure can concentrate parasites and attract invasive bees. Image Credits: Google Gemini
The invasive bee problem is realOne of the lesser-discussed risks of bee hotels is who else shows up. A study published in Acta Oecologica found a significant negative correlation between the arrival of invasive bee species and the presence of native cavity nesters in managed nesting sites. In other words, invasive species moved into the bee hotels, and native bees were moved or forced out. Nest evictions and deadly encounters between invasive and native species were directly noted in field notes.This matters because most bee hotel marketing focuses on what you hope will happen, not what does happen. When an invasive species like the giant resin bee moves into your hotel, it’s not just taking up space. It is actively displacing the native pollinators you built the whole thing to support.The parasite riskThen there’s the parasite angle, aside from invasive species. Many bees utilise the same nest structure across seasons, which allows for a much greater buildup and transmission of pathogens and parasites than dispersed, naturally occurring nests. Parasitism rates in bee hotels are higher than in natural nesting sites, partly because aggregated nests make it easier for parasites to find and move between hosts.That doesn’t mean you should take down yours immediately; it means you have to be realistic about what you’re taking on. Sanitation, seasonal replacement of nesting material and regular checks are not optional extras; they are the whole thing.The right way to look at itIf you want to support native bees, a bee hotel can be part of your approach, but it works best as part of a larger effort that includes native plants, reduced pesticide use, and preserved natural ground cover.Keep the focus on the goal: this is a structure for native bees, not a general insect welcome mat. Periodically empty it out. Replace the nesting tubes when they are worn or show any signs of pest activity, and put them somewhere you’ll actually walk past and see often.A bee hotel, done right, is a useful tool. Carelessly done, it is only a wooden box with a problem in it.
