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Booking Holdings Reports Today. Here's What Hotel Owners Should Already Know.

Wall Street expects $5.52 billion in Q1 revenue from Booking Holdings, up 16% year-over-year, fueled by a merchant model that now controls 61% of total revenue. The question for hotel owners isn't whether the quarter beats estimates... it's how much of your margin moved to their balance sheet.

Booking Holdings Reports Today. Here's What Hotel Owners Should Already Know.

Booking Holdings releases Q1 2026 results at 4:00 p.m. ET today with consensus at $5.52 billion in revenue and $1.07 EPS. The 16% year-over-year revenue growth estimate tracks against company guidance of 14-16%. Room night growth was guided at 5-7%. That gap between room night growth and revenue growth is the number that matters to anyone who owns a hotel. Revenue growing three times faster than room nights means the yield per booking is expanding. Booking isn't selling more rooms. It's extracting more per room sold.

The mechanism is the merchant model. Booking now processes payments directly on approximately 61% of transactions, up from roughly half two years ago. Every percentage point of merchant model adoption shifts pricing power from the hotel to the platform. Bundled deals, loyalty program management, payment processing... these aren't services. They're margin capture. When a guest books through a merchant-model OTA, the hotel receives a net rate. The spread between what the guest paid and what the hotel received is Booking's growth story. An owner told me once, "I'm making money for everyone except myself." He was looking at his OTA commission statement when he said it.

The $700 million "strategic reinvestment" Booking announced for 2026 deserves decomposition. Generative AI, "Connected Trip," global expansion, advertising, OpenTable growth. They're projecting this investment to accelerate revenue growth by 100 basis points above their long-term 8% target. The offset: $500-550 million in "efficiency gains" from a transformation program. Net incremental spend of $150-200 million to generate an additional point of revenue growth on a $24 billion base. That's roughly $240 million in incremental revenue for $175 million in incremental cost. The math works for Booking. The question is what "works" means for the hotel supplying the room.

The stock tells a parallel story. Down 16% year-to-date despite a 25-for-1 stock split in early April designed to broaden the investor base. Analysts still rate it "Buy" with a median target around $222 post-split, but several have trimmed targets citing normalizing travel demand and AI disintermediation risk. That last concern is worth pausing on... if the market is pricing in a scenario where AI reduces OTA intermediation, the logical Booking response is to deepen platform dependency before that window closes. Faster merchant model adoption. More bundled products. Tighter integration with hotel inventory systems. Every "partnership enhancement" announcement from an OTA over the next 18 months should be read through this lens.

Italy's competition authority opened an antitrust probe on April 22 into Booking.com's commercial practices, following Spain's €413 million fine in 2024 (under appeal). Europe is systematically challenging OTA market power. The U.S. is not. For American hotel owners, the regulatory asymmetry means any competitive relief will be geographic, not structural. Your distribution cost isn't going down. The call starts at 4:30. Listen for merchant model penetration targets and "Connected Trip" conversion metrics. Those two numbers will tell you more about your 2027 distribution costs than anything in your current franchise agreement.

Operator's Take

Here's what I'd do before that earnings call even starts. Pull your last 90 days of OTA production and calculate your blended effective commission rate... not the stated rate, the actual net after merchant model markdowns, bundled package discounts, and loyalty point redemptions. If you're north of 18-20% effective cost on OTA bookings, your direct booking strategy isn't a marketing initiative anymore... it's a margin defense. For every point of OTA contribution you can shift to direct, you're recovering real dollars per occupied room. If you're a GM at a branded property, bring this analysis to your owner before they hear about Booking's blowout quarter and start asking why your OTA mix is climbing. Show up with the number and a plan. That's what separates operators who run the business from operators who report on it.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: Booking Holdings
📊 Connected Trip 📊 Generative AI 📊 Loyalty Programs 🏢 OpenTable 📊 Revenue Management 🏢 Booking Holdings 📊 Merchant model 📊 OTA commission structure
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.