How much should hoteliers be spending on marketing?
9 experts shared their view
With the 2026 budgeting season in hospitality rapidly approaching, it's not too late to compare marketing spend in hospitality to the retail industry and the broader economy. As per the authoritative Gartner CMO 2025 Spend Survey, the average 2025 marketing budgets are 7.7% of total revenue, same as in 2024.
Hospitality is a retail industry - selling hotel rooms and auxiliaries to travel consumers. A common rule of thumb retailers is to spend between 5% and 10% of their of their gross revenue on advertising and marketing. In highly competitive markets and industries this allocation is 10% or more to keep pace with competitors.
HubSpot reports that companies generally spend around 9.1% of their total revenue on marketing. The U.S. Small Business Administration suggests that small businesses should allocate between 7% and 8% of their revenue to marketing.
What is the situation in hospitality? On average, U.S. hoteliers spend on marketing less than 2.5% of room revenue, including payroll for the Sales and Marketing Team (STR). The global hotel revenue in 2025 is projected to reach $443 billion. Even if all hotels were willing to spend 2.5% of that on marketing (which I doubt), then hoteliers' global spend on marketing would be $11 billion.
Compare this to Expedia, which spent on sales and marketing 54% of its 2024 revenue to the tune of $6.9 billion, 12% increase over the previous year. The big OTAs spent the whopping amount of $17.8 billion on marketing in 2024. No wonder hoteliers are losing the distribution war with the OTAs.
So, the question is: what percentage of total revenue should hoteliers be spending on marketing?
Whenever we talk about "how much", the first question I ask is not about percentages, but about definitions. What exactly lives under the umbrella of "marketing"? Does OTA advertising count, or should it be relegated to the distribution column? Is metasearch advertising a marketing expense, or is it revenue management wearing a different suit? The answer to those questions changes the budget conversation entirely.
My approach is less about chasing an industry average and more about anchoring spend to a healthy cost of acquisition for direct business. As a general rule, I never let the cost per acquisition for direct bookings exceed 10-12%, although the context may justify a lower or higher rate.
If you stay focused on the lower funnel, then 10% of total revenue is a comfortable and sustainable figure.
If you want to expand into mid-funnel activity, 15% is a better benchmark.
And your ambition is to own the top of the funnel (building awareness in new markets, launching a property, or relaunching after a renovation), then a 20% is more realistic.
The real danger lies in the delusion we can achieve OTA-level reach with budgets that would not keep a metasearch campaign alive for a month...