Xenia's F&B Revenue Jumped 13.4% in 2025. Here's the Number That Actually Matters.
Xenia is projecting $3M to $5M in incremental EBITDA from a single F&B reconcepting at one property. That per-outlet math should make every upper-upscale owner rethink what their restaurants are actually worth... or what they're leaving on the table.
Xenia Hotels & Resorts grew F&B revenue 13.4% across 30 properties in 2025, with banquet and catering up 17.2%. The headline reads like a win. The real number is underneath it.
Total RevPAR grew 8%. Same-property RevPAR guidance for 2026 is 1.5% to 4.5%, midpoint 3%. Total RevPAR guidance is 2.75% to 5.75%, midpoint 4.25%. That 125-basis-point spread between RevPAR and Total RevPAR tells you exactly where Xenia thinks the growth is coming from. Not rooms. F&B and ancillary. The company is betting that non-room revenue grows faster than room revenue in 2026. For a public REIT to make that bet explicit in guidance, the internal data has to be convincing.
The number that deserves decomposition: $3M to $5M in projected incremental hotel EBITDA from the reconcepted F&B outlets at a single property (their Nashville asset, in partnership with a celebrity chef group). That's one hotel. One F&B overhaul. At the midpoint, $4M in EBITDA against a company-wide adjusted EBITDAre projection of roughly $260M means a single restaurant reconcepting at one of 30 properties could represent 1.5% of total portfolio EBITDA. I audited a management company once that spent two years chasing 1.5% of portfolio EBITDA through rate optimization across every property. Xenia is projecting the same impact from one kitchen.
The risk is real and Xenia acknowledges it. Renovation disruption carries an estimated $1M negative impact on adjusted EBITDAre and FFO in 2026. CapEx drops from $86.6M in 2025 to a guided $70M-$80M range. Group pace is up 10%, which supports the banquet thesis, but group pace in March doesn't guarantee group actualization in Q3. The 2026 guidance also implies adjusted FFO per share of $1.89 at midpoint, roughly 7% growth. That's not a blowout. That's a company threading a needle between capital investment, renovation disruption, and the assumption that corporate groups keep spending on evening events at resort properties. If corporate travel budgets tighten (and there are reasons to think they might), the banquet-heavy F&B model is the first line item that contracts.
The structural question for the industry: Xenia shifted its portfolio from 26% luxury exposure in 2018 to 37% in 2025. That repositioning is what makes the F&B math work. You can't generate 17.2% banquet revenue growth at a select-service. The strategy is portfolio-specific, not replicable at every chain scale. But the principle is universal... non-room revenue as a percentage of total revenue is the metric that separates REITs with pricing power from REITs running on a treadmill. Xenia's 125-basis-point spread between RevPAR and Total RevPAR guidance is the clearest public signal I've seen that a lodging REIT is pricing F&B as a growth engine rather than an amenity cost center.
Here's what to do with this. If you're running an upper-upscale or luxury property with F&B outlets, pull your banquet and catering revenue as a percentage of total F&B for the last 12 months. Then compare it to 2019. Xenia's 17.2% banquet growth tells you the corporate group wallet is open right now... but it's open for properties that invested in the product. If your banquet kitchen hasn't been touched since 2017, you're watching that revenue walk to the property down the road that did the renovation. This is what I call the Flow-Through Truth Test... that 13.4% F&B revenue growth only matters if it's flowing to the bottom line, and F&B has a nasty habit of eating its own gains through labor and COGS. Don't just chase the top line. Track your F&B flow-through monthly. If revenue is up 13% and F&B profit is up 4%, you're working harder for less. That's not momentum. That's a treadmill.