Guides · Hotel GMs & revenue teams · Updated 2026-07-07

Hotel sauna ROI: the three revenue lines, modelled honestly

How a hotel sauna actually reaches the P&L — session revenue, sauna-view ADR, and OTA conversion — what the wellness data does and doesn't prove, and how to model payback on your own numbers.

A hotel sauna earns through three separate mechanisms, and an honest ROI model keeps them separate — because they carry different confidence levels and your revenue team should be able to stress-test each one alone.

Line 1: session revenue (highest confidence)

The direct line. Sessions booked in 50-minute windows through the PMS, priced like a treatment, visible in the nightly report. A cabin holding 4–5 guests, running even three booked slots a day at a defensible price, produces a number you can audit within a month of opening. This is the only line you should treat as near-arithmetic.

Line 2: sauna-view ADR (moderate confidence)

Rooms that look onto the cabin can be rated differently — the warm glow at the foot of the garden is a photographable feature, and it prices whether or not the amenity is booked that night. The honest caveat: this lift depends on your room mix, sightlines, and how your RM team actually tiers the inventory. Model it as a per-night premium on the specific rooms with the view, not as a property-wide percentage.

Line 3: OTA conversion (real, hardest to attribute)

Wellness amenity tags move listings through Booking.com and comparable platforms’ amenity filters — guests who filter for sauna access never see properties without the tag. In the short-let world, AirDNA’s 2024 analysis put sauna-equipped listings at roughly +7.4% ADR on average. Directionally useful; but for your hotel, treat it as a conversion-rate hypothesis to verify in your channel data after opening, not a promised uplift.

What the sector data proves — and what it doesn’t

RLA Global’s wellness reporting (built on HotStats data across thousands of hotels) consistently shows wellness-led properties outperforming on total revenue metrics, and its 2025 mid-year reporting made a point worth underlining for sauna buyers specifically: minor wellness properties — a well-planned amenity without a full spa build — grew profit (GOPPAR) faster than major-wellness properties in H1 2025.

What none of this proves: that any specific property gains any specific percentage. Sector averages describe cohorts, not your hotel. Any vendor quoting “+22% RevPAR” as your outcome is selling; the honest use of the data is as evidence that the category earns, followed by a model built on your ADR, your occupancy, and your room mix.

The payback frame

For hotel and glamping segments we model 18–36 months end-to-end, and we send the model in spreadsheet form so your team can break it. The structure is simple:

  1. Session line: slots/week × price × 52.
  2. View line: premium × nights sold on sauna-view rooms only.
  3. Conversion line: your channel manager’s before/after — modelled at zero until proven.

Hold the sum against the all-in cost: the cabin (ours is a published $52,920 base — full specification), electrical work, and roughly 4.5–5 kWh of energy per heat-up cycle. If the model only pays back with Line 3 doing heavy lifting, thin it until it works on Lines 1 and 2 — Line 3 is then upside, not load-bearing.

The full operator case, including the PMS integration scope for Mews, Cloudbeds and Lighthouse, is on the hotels page.

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