How Much Does a 120-Room Hotel Owner Make in the United States?
A 120-room hotel owner can show strong paper earnings, but take-home pay depends on occupancy, ADR, costs, debt, and reserves In the researched assumptions, Year 1 revenue is about $519 million, with EBITDA of $3759 million before debt, taxes, and reserves After the listed $122 million launch capex, Year 1 pre-tax cash capacity is about $254 million before financing costs This is not a guaranteed hotel owner salary
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Owner income calculator
Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.
Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate, not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice. Actual owner income will move with occupancy, ADR, staffing, debt, reserves, and cash needs.
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The screenshot shows revenue, EBITDA, RevPAR, cash flow, reserves, and owner pay; open the Hotel Financial Model Template.
Hotel cash flow dashboard highlights
- Owner pay stays clear
- EBITDA and RevPAR tracked
- Year 1 to 5 scenarios
How much revenue does a hotel make per room?
If you’re asking what a Hotel makes per room, the short answer is about $42,923 in annual room revenue per room, based on 55% occupancy and a $214 weighted ADR, which works out to about $118 RevPAR. Across 120 rooms, that’s about $5.15 million in room revenue, and with $45,000 of ancillary income, total top-line revenue is about $5.20 million. That is revenue, not owner take-home pay.
Per-room math
- $214 ADR x 55% occupancy = $118 RevPAR
- $42,923 annual room revenue per room
- 120 rooms = about $5.15 million room revenue
- $45,000 ancillary income lifts top line
What cuts owner pay
- Payroll can eat cash fast
- Fixed costs keep running monthly
- Commissions reduce room profit
- Debt service and reserves still come first
What hotel profit margin should an owner expect?
For Hotel, use EBITDA as the operating profit check: Year 1 is about 724% on about $519 million revenue, and Year 5 rises to about 791% as occupancy reaches 82% and revenue reaches about $878 million. If you want the setup cost context, see How Much Does It Cost To Open A Hotel Business? The pressure point is cost control: $810,000 Year 1 payroll, $438,000 fixed expenses, 8% OTA commissions, 7% food and beverage COGS, and 15% housekeeping supplies can shrink owner cash if they grow faster than ADR.
Profit check
- EBITDA is the main reference
- 724% in Year 1
- 791% by Year 5
- 82% occupancy lifts revenue
Cost pressure
- $810,000 payroll in Year 1
- $438,000 fixed expenses yearly
- 8% OTA commissions
- 7% and 15% variable costs
How much does a hotel owner make per year?
A Hotel owner doesn’t have one standard yearly salary; in this 120-room model, cash available starts from EBITDA of $3.759 million in Year 1, before debt, taxes, reserves, and owner draws. If you’re pressure-testing earnings, pair the profit view with What Is The Current Customer Satisfaction Level For Your Hotel Business?, because occupancy and ADR move with guest experience.
Owner Income Range
- Year 1 EBITDA: $3.759 million
- Year 3 EBITDA: $5.838 million
- Year 5 EBITDA: $6.946 million
- After $1.22 million capex: about $2.54 million
What Changes Pay
- Raise occupancy and ADR
- Control payroll costs
- Manage debt payments
- Replace or hire a general manager
Want to see what drives hotel owner income?
Occupancy
More occupied nights spread fixed costs across more sales, so this is the fastest way to lift hotel EBITDA.
ADR
A higher average daily rate raises room revenue without adding many extra costs, so more of it reaches owner cash.
Room Mix
The 60 Standard, 40 Deluxe, and 20 Suite mix sets the rate ceiling and shapes how much revenue each occupied night can bring in.
Payroll
Year 1 payroll is about $810K, so staffing levels and shift control have a big pull on profit.
OTA Fees
OTA commissions start at 8%, and every shift to direct bookings keeps more room revenue in the business.
Fixed Overhead
About $438K a year in fixed expenses sits below the top line, so overhead control drops straight to owner take-home.
Hotel Core Six Income Drivers
Occupancy rate
Occupancy Rate
Occupancy rate is the share of available room nights that get sold. In Year 1, the hotel has 43,800 available room nights and 24,090 occupied room nights at 55% occupancy. That matters because occupancy drives room nights, not just a percentage, and each extra filled night can lift owner cash if ADR holds and service costs stay in line.
By Year 5, occupancy rises to 82%, or 35,916 occupied room nights. With many hotel costs fixed, more occupied nights spread payroll, rent, and other overhead across more sales. The risk is filling rooms with heavy discounts: that can protect occupancy but weaken RevPAR (revenue per available room), so revenue quality matters as much as volume.
Track nights, not just occupancy
Measure available room nights, occupied room nights, ADR (average daily rate), and RevPAR together. The quick test is simple: if occupancy rises but ADR drops too far, owner income may not improve. Watch weekday versus weekend demand, since seasonal gaps and low-demand periods can force discounting that fills rooms but cuts margin.
- Track sold nights by date and room type.
- Compare ADR against competitor rates.
- Flag discounting that hurts RevPAR.
- Match staffing to demand, not hope.
Use forecasts to plan around seasonality and demand gaps. If occupancy is weak, first test rate, channel mix, and stay patterns before adding more labor or extra promotions. The goal is simple: raise filled nights without giving away rate, so more of each booking reaches owner cash.
Average daily rate and RevPAR
ADR and RevPAR
Average daily rate is the nightly room price, and RevPAR means revenue per available room. In this model, Year 1 weighted ADR is about $214 and RevPAR is about $118, which matches the math at roughly 55% occupancy ($214 × 55% = $117.70). That tells you room pricing is already doing a lot of work on income, but only if the hotel keeps enough occupied nights.
By Year 5, weighted ADR rises to about $242 and RevPAR to about $199 at 82% occupancy ($242 × 82% = $198.44). Higher rates lift room revenue and profit, but only when local demand, property quality, room mix, and competitor pricing can support it. Push rate too hard and occupancy can slip, which hurts RevPAR and the cash available to pay the owner.
Price to protect RevPAR
Track ADR and occupancy together, not in isolation. Here’s the quick math: RevPAR = ADR × occupancy, so a small rate gain can beat a big discount if demand holds. Watch weekday versus weekend pricing, room-type mix, and pickup by segment so you know which rooms can carry a higher rate without losing volume.
Test price changes against local comps and booking pace. If the market supports it, a move from $214 to $242 in weighted ADR can help the hotel earn more from the same room base. But if demand softens, rate hikes can backfire fast, because empty rooms still carry housekeeping, utilities, and fixed overhead.
- Measure ADR by room type.
- Watch occupancy by day.
- Compare rates to nearby hotels.
- Use RevPAR in forecasts.
Room count and positioning
Room Count and Positioning
Room count sets the revenue ceiling. This hotel has 120 total keys: 60 standard, 40 deluxe, and 20 suites, so it has 43,800 available room nights a year. More keys can lift top-line revenue, but they also raise staffing, housekeeping, maintenance, insurance, utilities, and capital spending on the rooms.
Positioning shapes the rate ladder. Suites carry the highest Year 1 pricing at $350 midweek and $450 weekend, while standard rooms start at $150 midweek and $180 weekend. If the mix tilts too far toward lower-rate rooms, revenue per stay drops. Capacity is not the same as profit.
Track Mix Before You Add Keys
Measure room revenue by type, not just total occupancy. The key inputs are room count, room mix, sell-through by room type, and the price gap between standard rooms and suites. ADR, or average daily rate, is the nightly room price; it should be checked against how often higher-rate rooms actually sell.
- Track occupancy by room type.
- Protect suite rate first.
- Watch housekeeping cost per occupied room.
- Forecast labor by occupied nights.
Before adding more rooms, test whether the current mix is already pulling down margin. If extra keys push up payroll and utilities faster than room revenue, owner cash falls even when sales rise. The cleanest win is to fill the right room at the right price, then add supply only when demand can absorb it.
Operating cost control
Operating cost control
Operating costs decide how much room and ancillary revenue turns into owner cash. In Year 1, payroll is $810,000 and fixed expenses are $36,500 per month ($438,000 a year), before variable costs like 8% OTA commissions and 15% housekeeping supplies. If labor, utilities, and supplies drift up, EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) falls fast even when occupancy is solid.
This driver includes staffing, utilities, maintenance, cleaning supplies, commissions, and admin overhead. The key inputs are occupied room nights, labor hours, utility use, and OTA mix. Here’s the quick math: $810,000 + $438,000 means the hotel starts Year 1 with $1.248 million in payroll plus fixed spend, so every wasted shift or unplanned repair cuts distributions.
Track the cost per occupied room night
Measure labor and supply cost against occupied room nights, not just monthly spend. If occupancy rises, use flexible staffing so housekeeping, front desk, and food and beverage hours match demand. Also track utility use by month and rooms cleaned per housekeeper shift; small misses here compound quickly and eat owner pay.
- Track payroll per occupied room night.
- Review OTA fees monthly.
- Schedule preventive maintenance early.
- Cap housekeeping supply usage.
One clean rule: more control on labor and supplies means more cash to the owner. If scheduling is loose or maintenance is reactive, fixed costs stay high while variable cost rises with each guest night. That’s the margin leak to watch.
Distribution and booking fees
Distribution and booking fees
Distribution can lift occupancy, but it cuts net room revenue. In this model, OTA commissions start at 8% in Year 1 and fall to 7% from Year 3 onward, while fixed marketing and brand spend is $4,000 per month. That fee comes straight out of room sales, so the owner keeps less cash per booking even when rooms fill faster.
Here’s the quick math: more paid-channel demand can help room nights sold, but each OTA booking leaves a smaller margin than a direct booking. The main inputs ar e occupied room nights, ADR, channel mix, and the share of bookings that come direct. If direct bookings rise without hurting demand, owner take-home income improves.
Protect direct booking margin
Track OTA nights, direct nights, ADR, and net room revenue after commission every week. If direct bookings hold occupancy steady, the owner keeps more of each sale and has more cash for fixed costs and profit. If demand drops, though, cutting paid channels too hard can weaken occupancy fast.
Use the model rates in forecasting: 8% commission in Year 1 and 7% from Year 3 onward, plus $4,000 per month of fixed marketing spend. One line to remember: more bookings help, but fee-heavy bookings can still hurt profit.
Debt service and capital reserves
Debt Service and Capital Reserves
Operating profit is not cash you can take home. The model shows Year 1 EBITDA of 3,759 million, but it also includes $122 million of launch capex for room furnishings, kitchen equipment, spa fit-out, IT, laundry, AV, security, and landscaping, so distributable cash will be much lower once financing and reserves are added.
Debt service is not provided, so principal and interest must be modeled separately. Add FF&E reserves in plain English, a furniture, fixtures, and equipment reserve, plus renovation spend and purchase price, or the owner’s draw can shrink even when EBITDA looks strong.
Track cash, not just EBITDA
Build a monthly cash model with EBITDA, debt service, reserve deposits, and capex. Track room revenue, ancillary revenue, fixed costs, and the reserve rate so you can see what is left for distributions before you set owner pay.
- Model principal and interest separately.
- Set monthly FF&E reserve deposits.
- Include renovation timing and spend.
- Test lower occupancy and ADR.
- Check cash after purchase debt.
If reserve funding or loan payments are heavy, the hotel may still look profitable on paper but pay little cash to the owner.
Compare lean, base, and strong hotel owner income cases
Owner income scenarios
Income shifts with occupancy, room mix, ADR, and extra sales from food, events, parking, and spa services. The same hotel can look weak or strong depending on year and rate power.
| Scenario | Lean CaseLean case | Base CaseBase case | Strong CaseStrong case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Launch model | This is the softer launch path with Year 1 occupancy at 55% and blended ADR near $214. | This is the Year 3 operating path with 75% occupancy and blended ADR near $230. | This is the stronger Year 5 path with 82% occupancy and blended ADR near $242. |
| Typical setup | It runs 120 rooms at 55% occupancy, blended ADR near $214, about $5.19M revenue, and $3.759M EBITDA before debt, taxes, and reserves. | It runs at Year 3 assumptions with 75% occupancy, blended ADR near $230, about $7.64M revenue, and $5.838M EBITDA. | It runs at Year 5 assumptions with 82% occupancy, blended ADR near $242, about $8.78M revenue, and $6.946M EBITDA. |
| Cost drivers |
|
|
|
| Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves | $2.5MLean case | $5.8MBase case | $6.9MStrong case |
| Best fit | Use this to stress-test a slow opening, softer demand, or weaker rate control. | Use this as the working plan for a steady hotel that hits model demand and pricing. | Use this to test upside from better pricing, fuller rooms, and stronger non-room spend. |
Planning note: Scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions; actual owner take-home can change with debt, taxes, reserves, and cash use.
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Frequently Asked Questions
In this model, Year 1 EBITDA is $3759 million before debt, taxes, and reserves After the listed $122 million launch capex, pre-tax cash capacity is about $254 million before financing costs Actual take-home depends on loan payments, renovation reserves, owner salary choices, and tax planning