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Resort Fees: A Growing Source of Revenue

While first introduced at resort properties, resort fees have become more prominent at non-resort hotels, drawing the ire of consumers. But just how much revenue do these fees contribute?
By Robert Mandelbaum
March 24, 2020 | 5:44 P.M.

REPORT FROM THE U.S.—The 11th edition of the Uniform System of Accounts for the Lodging Industry (USALI) defines resort fees as “mandatory fees charged at either a flat amount or a percentage of the room rate.”

These fees are frequently intended to cover services such as fitness facilities, spas, pools, local phone calls, internet access, airport transportation and golf driving ranges, among other recreational facilities.

Resort fees were initially introduced to allay the complaints of resort guests who felt they were being “nickel-and-dimed” every time they used a resort amenity. Since then, the practice of charging a resort fee—or similar mandatory charges—has been instituted at other types of hotels beyond resorts. It is the charge of a resort fee at non-resort properties that has caught the attention of travelers who question the mandatory fee.

Despite the clamor from travelers, resort fees are still a rare occurrence. According to the 2018 Lodging Survey published by the AHLA and STR, 6% of U.S. hotels charged a resort fee that year. Of the 6,300 detailed U.S. financial statements processed by CBRE Hotels Research for its annual “Trends in the Hotel Industry” survey, only 4.8% of them reported earning resort fee revenue in 2018. When analyzed by property type, 50.8% of the resort hotels in the CBRE sample charged a resort fee, versus 2.8% for all other hotel types. (STR is the parent company of Hotel News Now.)

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To assess the impact of resort fees on the operating performance of U.S. hotels, CBRE analyzed data from 306 properties that reported resort fee revenue in 2018. Historical trends were based on a sub-sample of properties that reported a resort fee each year from 2015 through 2018.

Impact on revenue
At hotels that charged a resort fee in 2018, the associated revenue averaged 3.3% of total revenue. This ratio was slightly higher at resort hotels (3.6%) as compared to non-resort properties (2.8%).

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The USALI changed its optional treatment of resort fee revenue between its 10th and 11th edition. According to the 10th edition, the rooms department was the default destination for recording resort fee revenue unless hoteliers could fairly allocate the revenue to the departments that provided the services covered by the fee. To the extent resort fee revenue augmented rooms revenue, the average daily rate of a hotel would also be increased to a similar degree.

To provide more equitable benchmarking, the 11th edition of the USALI mandates that all resort fee revenue be recorded as miscellaneous income in the summary operating statement. Therefore, resort fees no longer influence the ADR of a property.

On a hypothetical basis, what did this change mean to hoteliers? Without the resort fee revenue, the ADR for the hotels in the CBRE sample was $232.18 during 2018. If the resort fee revenue was included in rooms revenue during the year, the ADR would have increased by 6% to $246.01. A similar exercise would have boosted the ADR for resort hotels by 7.2%, and non-resort hotels by 4.5%.

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Revenue growth
According to STR, the pace of revenue-per-available-room growth for U.S. hotels has been decelerating since 2014. In the December 2019 edition of “Hotel Horizons,” CBRE forecasts the national average for RevPAR growth to be less than 1% per year through 2021. In reaction to this, hotel owners and operators are looking at all potential sources of revenue beyond the rental of guestrooms. Resort fees are one feasible revenue source that could make up for the deficiency.

From 2015 through 2018, resort fee revenue for the CBRE sample increased at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.9%. This exceeds the concurrent CAGR increases for rooms revenue (2.8%) and total hotel revenue (4.3%). Interestingly, resort fee revenue growth was greater at non-resort properties (12.7%) compared to the resorts in the sample (9.7%).

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Transparency and reality
For operators, transparency is paramount when adding mandatory fees. Hotels provide several amenities and services that come with legitimate costs. Therefore, if communicated properly, guests should understand the required resort fee.

If implemented properly, resorts fees are a prudent way to recoup expenses during austere times. However, operators also need to balance the market impact of raising the de facto price to stay at the property.

Robert Mandelbaum is Director of Research Information Services for CBRE Hotels Research. To create a custom report that benchmarks the resort fees earned by your hotel(s), please contact websales@cbre.com. This article was published in the January 2020 edition of Lodging.

The assertions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Hotel News Now or its parent company, STR and its affiliated companies. Please feel free to comment or contact an editor with any questions or concerns.