EBITDA measures earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization and is widely
used in hotel valuation.
Why it matters:
It reflects operational cash-generation potential and supports asset valuation.
Practical use:
EBITDA margins are tracked to evaluate operational improvements over time.
Real-life examples:
Outsourcing housekeeping improves EBITDA even though revenue remains flat.
EBITDA
Read also
R
- Rate Parity
- Restrictions
- Revenue Forecast
- Revenue Manager
- Revenue Mix
- RevID (Revenue Identification)
- RevPAG (Revenue per Available Guest)
- RevPAR (Revenue per Available Room)
- RevPOR (Revenue per Occupied Room)
- RFI (Request for Information)
- RFP (Request for Proposal)
- RMS (Revenue Management System)
- ROI (Return on Investment)
- Rooms Occupied


