In Brief: This piece explores the concept of rack rates in the hotel industry, providing definitions and examples, and discussing its role in shaping effective pricing strategies.
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Rack Rate in Hotels: Definition, Examples and How It Fits Your Pricing Strategy – Image Credit Lighthouse
Gone are the days when prospective guests had to look at desk-top display racks above a hotel front desks to view the various prices for hotel rooms. Now guests can simply perform a quick internet search to reveal rates, promotions, and discounts at a variety of accommodations across various booking platforms.
Even though the times have changed, ‘Rack Rate’ as a term still has staying power; revenue managers still talk of “raising the rack rate” and any hotelier you meet won’t bat an eye when asked “what is our rack rate tonight”
Key Takeaways
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Rack rate is a hotel’s published retail price with no discounts applied, serving as the baseline from which all other room rates and promotions derive.
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Modern revenue managers use “rack rate” and “Best Available Rate (BAR)” interchangeably, with both terms referring to the same pricing concept despite the outdated origins of “rack rate.”
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Revenue managers determine rack rates either manually through daily analysis of competitor pricing, market demand, and booking trends, or through automated dynamic pricing systems that adjust rates in real-time.
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Dynamic pricing systems analyze larger datasets than manual methods and can react instantly to market changes, but revenue managers retain control through setting price limits and occupancy thresholds.
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Hotels typically offer the most flexible cancellation policies with rack rates since these represent the highest prices in their rate structure and generate maximum revenue per booking.
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Effective rack rate pricing requires combining rate shopping tools, market demand analysis, and business intelligence solutions to avoid setting prices based on intuition alone.
What does rack rate mean?
A rack rate is a hotel’s published standard room price before any discounts, promotions or negotiated rates are applied. It represents the highest price a property charges for a given room type and serves as the baseline from which all other rates are derived, such as corporate, wholesale, group, promotional. You may also hear it called the best available rate (BAR), flexible rate, retail rate, standard rate or base rate. In modern revenue management, rack rate and BAR are used interchangeably and mean the same thing.
The term dates back to when hotels displayed room prices on a physical rack behind the front desk. of the hotel The rack itself is long gone, but the concept remains central to hotel pricing — it’s the reference point for setting every other rate in your structure, negotiating contracts with partners, and evaluating pricing performance.
RACK rate vs. BAR rate
In modern-day revenue management, the terms “Rack Rate” and “Best Available Rate” are used interchangeably and mean essentially the same thing, to confirm I put out the feelers with our own in house commercial strategy services team to see what real life managers thought:

The revenue managers who thought that there was a clear distinction were mostly making nuanced arguments around what exactly can be considered BAR (and the effect of qualified discounts and loyalty programs), but that’s a story for another blog. The overwhelming consensus was that BAR and Rack are interchangeable.
Here’s a good summary of what revenue managers think about the term in 2024:

That said, let’s operate under the assumption that Rack as a term isn’t going anywhere, but using it interchangeably with BAR is totally acceptable.
How to calculate rack rate
There’s no single formula that works for every hotel, but the most common starting approach is cost-based:
Rack rate = cost per room + (cost per room × target profit margin)
To find your cost per room, add up your total annual operating expenses — utilities, housekeeping, maintenance, staff wages, insurance, amenities — and divide by the number of room nights available per year.
Worked example:
A 50-room hotel with total annual operating costs of $1.2M has a cost per room night of approximately $66 ($1,200,000 ÷ 18,250 available room nights). With a 30% target profit margin, the rack rate would be:
$66 + ($66 × 0.30) = $85.80 per night
In practice, most revenue managers refine this starting point by factoring in competitor rack rates in the same market, the hotel’s star rating and positioning, seasonal demand patterns, and the ADR targets set in the annual budget.
A common rule of thumb is to set the rack rate 15–25% above your target ADR, giving enough headroom for discounts and promotions while keeping the published rate credible.
How do hoteliers determine rack rate?
A rack rate serves is a valuable lever for Revenue Managers. It serves many purposes beyond being simply the rate of the day. Dozens of dynamic discounts and packages flow from it. It can also act as a “canary in the coal mine” for pricing strategies. A grossly overpriced rack rate won’t be booked, while one that’s too low will be booked quickly. This allows Revenue Managers to gauge the effectiveness of their pricing strategies in real-time based on guest demand.
Revenue managers have 2 main options when determining their rack rate, setting the rate manually, or utilizing an automated dynamic pricing system.
Determine manually
Setting a rack rate is one of the key parts of an effective revenue management strategy, so it’s important that RM’s get it right. It’s often done on recurring commercial strategy calls or at the start of the day when revenue managers are assessing overnight pickup and previous night’s results.
Revenue managers look through all available data, including rate shops, their business intelligence tool, market demand data, and benchmarking data to determine the best price point for their rack rate.
A revenue manager might assess market conditions such as published rack rates from competitors for a pricing reference point, existing market mix such as transient vs. group bookings, historical data, and recent pickup trends from last-minute bookings before setting a price.
Once a rack rate is set in the PMS or RMS, the rate is often manually updated several additional times depending on pickup and feedback from prospective customers.
Utilize automated dynamic pricing
An automated dynamic pricing system is used to ingest the relevant data, and then push an optimal rack rate to the property management system automatically.
The benefits of a dynamic pricing system are that rate can change instantly, and do not require a revenue manager to be present. This can be useful for reacting to unexpected demand, or sudden changes in market conditions.
A dynamic pricing solution will look at all of the same factors that a human looks at, but will be able to analyze a much larger amount of data, and isn’t restricted to only working hours.
How rack rate fits into a dynamic pricing strategy
If revenue managers choose to utilize a dynamic pricing strategy for setting their rack rate, they should consider a few factors.
First, they should determine exactly how much control they want an automated system to have – most dynamic pricing systems will allow certain rules that only change the rack rate when certain conditions are met, so a system may only change the rack rate when occupancy is below 80%, and turn control over to the revenue manager when this threshold is exceeded.
Revenue managers can also define a set highest price or lowest price that they want the system to generate.
Also, when utilizing a dynamic pricing strategy, revenue managers should understand and continuously monitor the inputs that determine the rack rate – for example, competitor weights, what constitutes low and high demand, and even factors like rate rounding should be periodically revisited to ensure that the dynamic pricing solution always selects the best possible rack rate.

Common rack rate mistakesSetting rack rate by gut feel
Without competitor data and demand signals, rack rate becomes a guess. A rate that feels right to the revenue manager may be $20 above or below where the market actually sits, and that gap compounds across every night and every room type. Always ground your rack rate in data: rate shopping, demand forecasting and benchmarking should all inform the number.
Never revisiting the rate
A rack rate set in January and left untouched until December ignores everything that happens in between — new supply, shifting demand, competitor repositioning, economic changes. Review your rack rate at least quarterly, and adjust it whenever market conditions shift meaningfully.
Setting it too high
An unrealistically high rack rate might look impressive on paper, but if no guest ever books at that price, it serves no strategic purpose. Worse, it can distort your discount percentages, for example a “30% off” promotion sounds generous but means nothing if the starting rate was inflated. Your rack rate should be achievable during peak demand, not a ceiling no one ever touches.
Setting it too low
A rack rate set below your market’s competitive range caps your revenue potential and sends the wrong signal about your property’s positioning. If your rack rate is lower than comparable hotels in your competitive set, guests and partners may perceive your hotel as a lower-tier option, even if the product is equal or better.
Set your rack rate with confidence
Getting your rack rate right requires more than experience and instinct, it requires real-time visibility into what your competitors are charging, where demand is heading, and how your pricing compares to the market. A rate shopping or pricing intelligence tool shows you exactly where your rack rate sits relative to the compset, while demand data helps you anticipate shifts before they impact your pricing.
To see how Lighthouse brings forward-looking demand signals, rate intelligence, and AI automated pricing recommendations in one platform, explore Lighthouse Pricing.
About Lighthouse
Lighthouse is the AI Commercial Operating Platform for hospitality — the intelligence and automation layer that connects pricing, distribution, marketing, and performance management into a single system of action. Powered by the industry’s largest proprietary data network, spanning 80,000 hotels across 185 countries, Lighthouse delivers better commercial outcomes for global chains, regional groups, and independent hoteliers. Learn more at www.mylighthouse.com.












