Once each department has produced its profit, the property's central costs come into play. This module follows the P&L down past departmental profit through undistributed expenses, fixed charges, and the replacement reserve — to the number every owner reads first.
Module 2 ended at Total Departmental Profit — the combined profit of Rooms, F&B, and Other Operated Departments. From here, the P&L makes a hard turn. The remaining lines aren't about producing revenue; they're about running the building, supporting the operation, and recognizing the cost of capital. Each step downward removes a different category of expense and produces a different bottom line. Each bottom line answers a different question.
The four steps you'll learn to walk: Total Departmental Profit answers "do our operations work?" Subtract undistributed operating expenses and you arrive at Gross Operating Profit, which answers "is the property well-run?" Subtract management fees, property taxes, and insurance and you arrive at EBITDA, which answers "does the asset generate cash?" Subtract a replacement reserve and you arrive at EBITDA less Replacement Reserve, which answers "is the owner's return real?"
Knowing which question each subtotal answers is the difference between a manager who reports numbers and a manager who explains them.
Undistributed expenses are property-wide costs that benefit the whole operation but don't sit cleanly inside any single department. USALI 12 organizes them into five distinct sections — each with its own logic, its own KPIs, and its own typical share of revenue.
The GM, finance, HR, executive office, credit card commissions, bad debt, professional fees. Anything administrative not tied to a department. Watch for credit card fees creeping above 2% — that's a sign of mix shift toward direct-billed segments.
PMS, POS, network, IT staff, software subscriptions, guest-facing technology. Has grown dramatically over the last decade. USALI 12 expanded this section to reflect that growth.
Sales team salaries, digital marketing, brand fees, loyalty program contributions, PR. Increasingly the largest controllable. Customer Acquisition Cost (now formalized in USALI 12) belongs here.
Engineering staff, repairs, supplies, contracts for HVAC and elevators, grounds. The maintenance you spend now to avoid the capex you'll spend later. Underspending here is one of the easiest short-term wins and one of the most expensive long-term mistakes.
Formerly "Utilities." Now includes new consumption KPIs — kWh per occupied room, water per occupied room, waste per occupied room — alongside cost. Sustainability metrics have entered the mainstream report.
GOP is the most important number on the entire P&L for a working manager. It is the bottom line of operations — everything an operator can control. Departmental teams produce revenue and manage direct costs. The GM and undistributed teams run the building. GOP captures both. Above GOP, you're managing. Below GOP, you're a passenger.
Healthy GOP margins vary by segment. Luxury full-service typically lands at 25–35%. Upper-upscale at 30–40%. Select-service often runs 40–50% because the cost structure is leaner. Resorts can vary widely depending on amenity load. The right benchmark is not "what's a good GOP" in the abstract — it's "what's a good GOP for this property type."
GOP per available room — GOPPAR — is the metric that captures both revenue performance and cost discipline in a single number. Increasingly, owners and asset managers prefer GOPPAR to RevPAR because it can't be gamed by selling cheap room nights to inflate the top line.
Below GOP, the P&L records expenses that exist because the property exists — not because of how the property is operated. They are sometimes called "fixed charges," though the term is slightly misleading; they aren't all fixed, but none of them can be managed through better operations alone.
Management fees typically run 2–4% of revenue plus an incentive fee tied to GOP. A property under third-party management has these. An owner-operated property doesn't. Property taxes are set by the local jurisdiction and move only when reassessments happen. Insurance covers property, liability, and business interruption. Ground rent, where applicable, is the lease payment to the landowner. Owner-funded equipment leases sometimes appear here as well.
The discipline at this level: recognize what's controllable and what isn't. Holding a GM accountable for property tax increases is unfair and unhelpful. Holding them accountable for incentive management fees they helped earn is entirely appropriate.
EBITDA — Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization — is the cash-generation number for the asset. It's what the property produces before the owner decides how to finance it (interest), where to domicile it (tax), or how to account for the building's wear (depreciation). It's the cleanest comparable measure across hotels with different ownership structures.
But EBITDA on its own has a problem: it pretends the building will last forever. It won't. Furniture wears out. Bathrooms date. HVAC fails. The replacement reserve — typically 3–5% of revenue, sometimes structured as a sliding scale that ramps up as the property ages — sets aside cash for the FF&E (Furniture, Fixtures, and Equipment) renewals every property eventually needs.
EBITDA less Replacement Reserve is the number serious owners look at. It's the most honest representation of what the asset actually produces, on a sustainable basis, before debt service. USALI 12 reports it explicitly as a subtotal for exactly this reason: it's the number that prevents short-term over-distribution from disguising the deferred cost of long-term ownership.
This exercise asks you to map each step of your own property's walk-down. Pull last year's full P&L. Print it. Walk through the four steps with a pen.
The walk down the P&L looks straightforward on paper. In practice, every property has lines that don't quite fit, costs that drift between sections, and reserves that the owner and operator argue about. Come prepared to discuss:
An A&G running at 4% is great if you're efficient and a problem if you're under-resourcing the back office. An S&M at 11% might be over-spending or might be growth investment. Tell the story behind the number.
The answer is more revealing than it should be. Some properties report only down to GOP because no one wants to argue about reserve levels. That's a problem.
Fees tied to GOP encourage cost discipline. Fees tied to revenue can encourage volume at the expense of margin. The mechanism shapes the behavior — and it's worth understanding why your fee is structured the way it is.