Today · Apr 5, 2026
RevPAR Is Lying to You. Here's the Number That Actually Matters.

RevPAR Is Lying to You. Here's the Number That Actually Matters.

The hotel industry's favorite metric ignores the fastest-growing line item on your P&L: what it costs to put that guest in that room. The gap between RevPAR and NetRevPAR is where owner returns go to die.

RevPAR as a standalone metric has a structural flaw that's getting more expensive every year. Here's what that looks like in practice: a 100-room hotel selling 90 rooms at $150 ADR shows $135 RevPAR. Clean. Simple. Useless... because it doesn't tell you whether those 90 rooms cost $25 per key in distribution or $55. At $25, your net room revenue is $11,250. At $55, it's $8,550. Same RevPAR. $2,700 difference per night. That's $985,500 per year the industry's primary KPI doesn't account for. I've audited properties where the management company reported strong RevPAR growth for three consecutive quarters while the owner's actual cash flow declined. Same P&L, two completely different stories depending on which line you stop reading at.

The distribution cost problem is accelerating. OTA commissions, loyalty program assessments, transaction fees, brand marketing contributions... these aren't static. They compound. A property I analyzed last year showed 8.2% RevPAR growth year-over-year. Looked great on the monthly report. Distribution costs grew 14.1% over the same period. The owner's net room revenue per available room actually declined by $1.87. The management company's fee (calculated on gross revenue) went up. The owner's return went down. This is the structure working exactly as designed... just not designed for the person holding the real estate risk.

NetRevPAR (room revenue minus distribution costs, divided by available rooms) isn't new. Revenue managers have understood cost-of-acquisition for years. What's new is that the gap between RevPAR and NetRevPAR is widening fast enough that the metric choice itself becomes a strategic decision. An owner evaluating a management company on RevPAR index is rewarding behavior that may actively destroy equity. A revenue manager incentivized on RevPAR will rationally choose a $200 OTA booking over a $180 direct booking... even though the net contribution on the direct booking is higher. The metric creates the behavior. The behavior creates the outcome.

The real number here is the spread between gross and net, expressed as a percentage of revenue. For many branded properties, total brand cost (franchise fees, loyalty assessments, reservation fees, marketing fund, rate parity restrictions) exceeds 15-20% of room revenue. That percentage is the tax on RevPAR that RevPAR doesn't show you. If you're an asset manager reviewing quarterly performance and you're not calculating NetRevPAR by channel, you're reading a book with every third page ripped out. The plot doesn't make sense because you're missing the parts that matter.

Operator's Take

Here's what I want you to do this week. Pull your channel mix report and your distribution cost report. Put them next to each other. Calculate your net revenue per available room by channel... OTA, brand.com, direct, group, corporate negotiated. I guarantee you'll find at least one channel where you're working harder for less. Then walk that into your next owner call, because if you don't show them the real number, someone else will... and it won't be framed in your favor.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: Hotel Industry
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