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Understanding the Revenue Report

Verified May 2, 20262 min read

The Revenue Report is the report you'll read more than any other. This article walks through each section so the numbers tell the right story.

Top-line revenue

  • Total revenue — everything earned in the period across hotel, POS, services, non-hotel.
  • Gross revenue — total including all taxes.
  • Net revenue — total after VAT (the figure that lands in your P&L).

Revenue split

  • Rate revenue (room nights) — what guests paid for the rooms themselves.
  • POS revenue — restaurant, bar, shop sales through the POS module.
  • Service revenue — spa, transfers, late checkout fees, parking, breakfast supplements — anything from the Services catalog.
  • Non-hotel revenue — additional reservation-side charges that aren't room-night based (room-charge tabs, damage fees, etc.).

Performance metrics

  • ADR (Average Daily Rate) — room revenue / occupied rooms. The price you actually got per occupied room. Higher = better, but only if occupancy holds.
  • RevPAR (Revenue per Available Room) — room revenue / available rooms (occupied + unsold). The truer measure of property efficiency. RevPAR up = either rate up or occupancy up.
  • Revenue per occupied unit — total revenue (not just room) per occupied room. Captures what each room earned across rate, F&B, services. The whole-stay value of an occupied room.
  • Revenue per guest — total revenue / total guests. Useful for properties with high group volume where rooms can be split-occupied — captures the actual value per head.

Occupancy and units

  • Occupancy % — sold units / available units. Strip out OOO and on-hold rooms to get true occupancy of sellable inventory.
  • Sold / unsold units — the absolute counts behind the percentage.
  • Total guests, guest categories — headcount split by adult/child/infant. Drives meal forecasting and capacity planning.

Source revenue

Per-source revenue breakdown — Direct (booking engine), Walk-in, Booking.com, Expedia, Airbnb, others. The single most important slice for channel strategy: a high direct share means commission-free revenue and a strong brand; a high Booking.com share with low ADR means commission is eating you alive. Compare to last year's same period to spot drift.

Reading order — where to look first

  1. Total revenue and occupancy first — the headline.
  2. ADR and RevPAR — are you charging well, and is the property earning per room?
  3. Source split — where is the business coming from? Has the mix shifted?
  4. Revenue split (rate / POS / service / non-hotel) — is ancillary spend tracking the rate? Are there underperforming F&B outlets?
  5. Revenue per guest — is each guest spending what they used to, or are you discounting too hard?

Frequently asked questions

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