HENDERSONVILLE, Tennessee — November 2, 2021 — Increased spending on labor created lower gross operating profit for U.S. hotels, according to STR‘s September 2021 monthly P&L data release.

Estimated labor costs came in at 96% of the comparable level from 2019, which was the highest index of the pandemic-era. All the key profitability metrics fell from August.

  • GOPPAR: US$46.29
  • TRevPAR: US$140.94
  • EBITDA PAR: US$30.47
  • LPAR (Labor Costs): US$47.50

 

“Higher labor margins meant less room for profits, and the GOP margin fell for the second consecutive month to 33%,” said Raquel Ortiz, STR’s assistant director of financial performance. “Like we noted last month, September P&L data was going to be interesting because the earlier reported top-line metrics were showing some return of business travel and groups. To accommodate that demand, hotels reopened F&B operations and increased their overall staffing levels in an inflationary environment with higher wages.”

 

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Among the major markets, only San Francisco remains in negative GOPPAR territory through the first nine months of the year.
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Industry stakeholders interested in Monthly P&L participation should contact MonthlyPnL@STR.com. Those interested in subscribing to reports should contact their account manager or info@STR.com.

 

Key profitability metrics:

TRevPAR – Total revenue per available room

GOPPAR – Gross operating profit per available room

EBITDA – Earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation, and amortization

LPAR – Total labor costs per available room