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March 2, 2026Key Priorities for a Profitable Hospitality Business
The hospitality industry is a brilliant but brutal place to operate. Hotels, guest houses, pubs with rooms, restaurants, and wider hospitality businesses face pressure from every direction: labour shortages, rising food costs, rate hikes, volatile tourism demand, and increasingly cash‑strapped customers.
Yet one truth remains constant: profitable hotels aren’t the ones with the nicest decor, they’re the ones with the strongest financial grip.
At HLWA, we work closely with hospitality operators across South Wales, the South West, and the South East. We see the same pattern across independent hotels, multi‑site operators, leisure venues, and guest houses: those who treat financial reporting and business strategy as core parts of their day to day operations outperform those who don’t.
This article explores the key financial considerations hotels must prioritise if they want to stabilise cash flow, improve profitability, and plan confidently for future growth.
1. Cash Flow: The Single Biggest Threat to a Hospitality Business
Hospitality businesses don’t usually fail because they’re unprofitable, they fail because they run out of cash.
Seasonality, deposits, no‑shows, group booking volatility, supplier price changes… cash flows unpredictably in the hospitality sector.
The biggest mistakes we see include:
- Relying on outdated accounting systems that don’t show real‑time cash positions
- Underestimating wage inflation and rota‑driven cost creep
- Failing to model occupancy variations properly
- Not forecasting VAT and corporation tax liabilities early enough
A solid cash flow forecast, updated monthly, gives hotels breathing room. It’s the difference between reactive firefighting and proactive planning.
2. Financial Reporting: The Hotel KPI Blind Spot
Many hospitality operators receive accounts that tell them what they already know, after it’s too late to act. Hotels need hospitality‑specific management accounts, not generic P&Ls.
Key KPIs include:
- Occupancy
- ADR
- RevPAR
- GOPPAR
- Wage % of turnover
- Food and beverage GP by category
- Room profitability vs F&B profitability
A monthly KPI dashboard transforms the way owners manage performance. When we introduce proper reporting for independent hotels, owners almost always say the same thing: “I can finally see what’s actually happening.”
3. Margins, Pricing and Yield Strategy — The Underused Profit Lever
Too many hotels set prices using gut feel or competitor watching alone.
In the hospitality sector, pricing needs a strategy. Not guesswork.
Thoughtful yield management can:
- Boost low‑season occupancy
- Protect margins during high‑demand periods
- Make F&B profitable rather than “nice to have”
- Reduce reliance on OTAs
- Improve stability in year‑round cash flow
Profitability isn’t purely about volume, it’s about intelligent pricing aligned with demand patterns.
4. Capital Allowances and Tax Planning: Often Overlooked, Always Valuable
Hotels are asset‑heavy businesses, which means capital allowances are a major tax opportunity.
Yet many claims are incorrect, incomplete or done too late to help cash flow.
Common missed items include:
- Fixed installations
- Refurbishments
- Kitchens
- Heating and ventilation systems
- Integral features in older buildings
When done correctly, tax planning becomes a strategic tool, not an annual scramble.
5. Internal Controls and Fraud Prevention — The Quiet Risk Hotels Underestimate
High transaction volumes, multiple revenue streams and seasonal staffing create risk.
Strong internal controls protect:
- Cash handling
- Stock ordering
- Payroll
- Till variances
- Supplier relationships
We often find that owners “don’t know what they don’t know”… until a control failure forces an uncomfortable review.
6. Why Outsourcing the Finance Function Is Becoming the Industry Standard
Trading conditions are tough, and most independent hotels don’t have the scale for a full in‑house finance team.
Outsourcing provides:
- A dedicated accounts manager
- Sector‑specific bookkeeping and payroll support
- On‑demand expert advice
- Monthly management accounts and forecasting
- Assurance over tax, compliance and internal controls
In a sector with tight margins and high risk, outsourced financial expertise isn’t a cost, it’s a stabiliser.
7. The Strategic Imperative: Build a Financial Plan Before You Need One
With tightening budgets, operators need a business strategy grounded in numbers, not hope.
A strong hospitality strategy will:
- Map out 12–36 month investment plans
- Model occupancy scenarios
- Identify cost drivers
- Align staffing to demand
- Plan refurbishments and acquisitions
- Support owner‑managers in long‑term decision‑making
When you understand your numbers, you can manage your business — not the other way around.
Hotels Don’t Need More Reports — They Need Better Insight
The hospitality industry will always be challenging. But the businesses that thrive are the ones that treat financial health and business finances as non‑negotiable.
Specialist hotel accountants and tax advisers bring sector‑specific insight, expert support, a proactive approach, and the detailed knowledge needed to improve profitability in a notoriously difficult industry.
If hospitality operators want to future-proof their businesses and move their business forward, the real question isn’t “Can I afford specialist advice?” It’s “Can I afford not to have it?”



