← Back to Feed

DiamondRock's Earnings Look Great. The 2026 Guidance Tells a Different Story.

DRH's net income jumped 274% in Q4 and the dividend got a bump. But the full-year EBITDA guidance for 2026 is flat to down, and nobody's talking about what that means for the per-key math.

DiamondRock's Earnings Look Great. The 2026 Guidance Tells a Different Story.

DiamondRock posted $0.27 in adjusted FFO per diluted share for Q4 2025, beating consensus by $0.03. Net income hit $23.8 million for the quarter, up 273.7% year-over-year. The board raised the quarterly dividend to $0.09 from $0.08. The headline reads like a victory lap. The 2026 guidance reads like a warning label.

Full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA is projected at $287 million to $302 million. The midpoint of that range is $294.5 million. Full-year 2025 actual was $297.6 million. That's a midpoint decline of roughly 1%. RevPAR growth guidance is 1% to 3%, which sounds fine until you remember that 2025 comparable RevPAR grew just 0.4%. So the company is guiding for acceleration in revenue per room while simultaneously guiding for flat-to-lower EBITDA. The only way those two numbers coexist is if cost to achieve is rising faster than revenue. That's the number behind the number.

The preferred stock redemption is the move worth studying. DRH retired all 4.76 million shares of its 8.25% Series A preferred in December, spending $121.5 million in cash. At 8.25%, that preferred was costing roughly $9.8 million annually. Eliminating that obligation is pure accretion to common equity... but it also burned a significant cash position. Pair that with 4.8 million common shares repurchased during 2025 at an average of $7.72, and you're looking at a company that deployed over $158 million in capital on balance sheet cleanup rather than acquisitions. That's a statement about where management sees better value: in their own stock versus what's available in the transaction market. At $7.72 average repurchase against a portfolio trading at $257K per key versus $440K adjusted replacement cost, the math supports the buyback. But it also means DRH is choosing financial engineering over portfolio growth at a point in the cycle where others are buying.

An owner I sat across the table from once told me, "I'm not worried about the quarter. I'm worried about the year after the quarter everyone celebrates." He was talking about a different REIT, but the pattern is identical. DRH's 2025 was strong on earnings per share because of share count reduction and preferred elimination, not because of NOI growth. Adjusted EBITDA was essentially flat year-over-year (down 0.1%). Free cash flow per share grew 6%, but decompose that and the growth came from fewer shares outstanding, not from more cash flow. That's not a critique of the strategy... it's a description of the mechanism. Investors pricing DRH on FFO per share growth should understand that the growth engine is capital return, not operating improvement. Those are different durability profiles.

The Altman Z-Score sitting at 0.97 is the line item that should keep asset managers honest. Below 1.8 is the distress zone. DRH isn't in crisis, but a Z-Score under 1.0 for a lodging REIT with 35 properties and flat EBITDA guidance means the margin for error on cost management in 2026 is thin. If RevPAR comes in at the low end of guidance (1%) and labor costs track the industry projection of 3% growth, the EBITDA floor of $287 million starts looking optimistic. Check again.

Operator's Take

Here's what matters if you're running one of DiamondRock's 35 properties: the ownership just told Wall Street that EBITDA is going sideways while RevPAR grows. That means they need you to hold the line on expenses... period. If your regional asset manager hasn't called you about 2026 cost containment yet, they will. Get ahead of it. Pull your labor cost per occupied room for the last three quarters, know your overtime trends, and have a plan ready before they ask. The owners who survive flat EBITDA cycles are the ones who controlled costs before someone made them.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: DiamondRock Hospitality
📊 Cost structure 📊 Per-key valuation 📊 Preferred stock redemption 📊 Share repurchase 📊 Adjusted FFO per diluted share 🏢 DiamondRock Hospitality 📊 Dividend 📊 EBITDA guidance 📊 Net income 📊 RevPAR Growth
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.