A few years ago, I did something most photographers never do: I sat down and earned certifications in Innovation, AI & Intellectual Property Law, and in Copyright Law Developments across the U.S., Europe, and China.
I didn't do it because I was planning a career change. I did it because I kept running into the same question, over and over, from hotel owners, asset managers, and marketing directors: “Wait — who actually owns these photos once the shoot is done?”
It's a fair question. And the honest answer is: it depends entirely on what's in the agreement you signed — and most people in this industry have never actually read theirs closely.
The Question Nobody Asks Until It's a Problem
Hospitality photography usage rights are more complicated than they look. Some agreements are exclusive. Some are perpetual. Some allow the photographer to license the same images elsewhere after a set number of years; others never let go. Some cover only the specific property; others quietly extend to sister properties under the same management company — which can create real compliance problems if that cross-use isn't properly authorized by the brand.
Most owners and operators sign these agreements without a second look, because photography contracts feel like a formality compared to the property's actual legal work. In practice, they're not a formality at all — they determine who can use your property's images, where, for how long, and whether you'll ever need to pay for new photography again sooner than expected because of a licensing gap nobody caught.
What This Actually Means for You
When I'm brought in to photograph a property, I'm not just showing up with a camera. I understand:
How usage-rights terms differ meaningfully between major hospitality brands, and what that means for you as an owner or operator
Where the common gray areas sit — cross-property use, sister-brand use, resale rights — and how to avoid stepping into one accidentally
How to structure licensing so that everyone who needs the images (owners, designers, architects, brand marketing) can use them appropriately, without anyone overstepping what they're actually entitled to
This isn't legal advice, and I'm not your attorney — for anything contract-specific, you should always have your own counsel review the terms. But it does mean that when we talk about a shoot, I can have an informed, precise conversation about what you're actually agreeing to, instead of a vague one.
Why This Should Matter to You
In an industry where “the photographer” and “the lawyer” have traditionally been two completely separate conversations, I think that's a mistake. The images your property uses for the next several years — sometimes decades — are governed by paperwork that's usually signed in five minutes and never looked at again.
I'd rather be the photographer who helps you get that part right the first time.
David McGhee is a Dallas-based architectural and hospitality photographer, Marriott Brand Approved Photographer across eleven brands, and holds ABA certifications in Innovation, AI & Intellectual Property Law and in Copyright Law Developments.