WordPress.com is home to millions of great blogs and lots of great websites, from small businesses to schools to hotels. Forget your travel agent — you can find places to stay from New Zealand to New Mexico on WordPress.com.

Since we launched WordPress.com/hotels in April, hundreds of inns, guesthouses, motels, and more around the world have used it to create sleek sites that show off their amenities and locations. Here are a few of the places we love (and want to visit!).

Amy’s Place

Amy’s Place uses the Stay theme — created specifically to show off hotels and inns to their best advantage — to highlight a picture-perfect tropical setting that makes any reader want to book a trip ASAP:

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(If you’re ready to call your travel agent, you’ll need tickets to Sumatra, Indonesia.)

She uses Stay’s image slider to highlight a different beguiling photo for each of her whimsically-named menu items — Surf, Shelter, Grub, and Downtime. Her bright orange logo and the pops of orange background along the edges inject a fun note into what is otherwise a refined, elegant theme, giving the site a laid-back feel that matches its owner’s attitude.

Screen Shot 2013-09-10 at 11.41.49 AMHer site is chock-full of useful information, from check-in policies to beach recommendations to the location of the nearest working ATM (not so close, so bring some Indonesian Rupiah). Stay also includes a reservation inquiry widget so interested guests can submit the details of their proposed visit. Wisely, Amy includes the form in the sidebar on every page, making it easy to drop her a line no matter which page you’re on when the fancy strikes.

(Note: to make sure the hotel-specific features are activated, be sure to sign up for your site through the WordPress.com/hotels page.)

Amy doesn’t just rest on a great layout and stunning photography — her copy also gives you a feel for what an Amy-style Indonesian vacation will be like:

I traveled around the world, surfing, for years, with no real plans to stop… until I got here.

When I first arrived in this area, I knew there was something special here. I’d love to have you share the experience.

I take things like surf, bathrooms, adventure, beds, food, & cold beer seriously. I hope you do too.

Screen Shot 2013-09-10 at 11.44.39 AMAs long as you’re heading to Asia, stop by the Windflower Boutique Hotel in Mui Ne, Vietnam. Their site shows off another key feature for hotels and inns: custom room descriptions (at left). Upload photos, pricing, and descriptions for a range of rooms, and let us lay them out into a clean, easy-to-navigate page.

(We also love the way they’re using the Instagram widget to add color to the sidebar and communicate important info for visitors, like the temperature and beach conditions; it’s a creative use of photos that could work on a variety of sites.)

If Indonesia and Vietnam aren’t for you, try the Cannon House in Simon’s Town, South Africa; Kawai Purapura Retreat outside Auckland, New Zealand; Kizingoni House on Lamu Island, Kenya (which packs a punch with a tiled gallery on its home page); the Yellow Inn in Kathmandu, Nepal; Casale Giuncheto in Perugia, Italy; or South Yarra Place in Melbourne, Australia — all created using Stay.

Don’t operate a B&B? There’s more to Stay than just a great theme for hotels; it’d be useful for a variety of tourism-related sites — think tour operators, restaurants, or spas. (It’s just as good for sites that have nothing to do with travel: check out how one mortgage broker used it to build a site for her business.)

Crystal Rainier Retreat

Stay isn’t just for inns in far-flung locations. The Crystal Rainier Retreat, a vacation home in the Cascade Mountains of Washington State, also uses the Stay theme, adding custom colors and fonts to give it a darker look perfect for a mountain lodge:
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Using the $30 Custom Design upgrade, the Retreat’s proprietors layered dark gray over a subtle wood-grain background that peeks around the edges of the page. A sturdy font in a warm off-white paired with a photo of a comfy, rustic room complete Stay’s transformation from Beach Blanket to Bunny Slope.

Instead of displaying the reservation form widget in a sidebar, they’ve opted to make it a drop-down option — it remains accessible on every page, but frees up sidebar space for key information like maps and directions, or allows them to take advantage of the full width of the page for content:
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We don’t know about you, but we’re taking some ski lessons and saving up our frequent flyer miles.

Vashisht Home Stay and Café

Creating a website for an inn or rental property doesn’t require use of Stay — once you’ve created a site, you can choose any of WordPress.com’s 200+ themes. As long as you sign up through the wordpress.com/hotels page, all the hotel-related options will be available, no matter which theme you choose.

The Vashisht Home Stay, in an area of northern India known for its natural hot springs, opted for the punchy, high-contrast look of Fanwood Light:

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Vashisht uses the same reservation widget, which now blends in with Fanwood Light‘s colors. A custom menu along the top of the screen makes it easy to find information on rooms and local attractions, while the starkness of the theme helps photos pop off the screen.

They’re not the only proprietors who have branched off from the Stay theme: The Long House Bed and Breakfast went with Vigilance, a classic theme with multiple custom menu areas that let them neatly organize information on the house, rooms, and local area.

Great photography, clear descriptions of amenities, and an easy way to make reservations are key to a hotel website that turns browsers into real-life visitors. WordPress.com/hotels make it simple for any proprietor to create a site that fits the bill quickly and easily.

Forget Travelocity — browse the Reader to find your next dream vacation!

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