What Is a “Good” NPS in Hospitality Today?
Reported by Olli Benett | April 22nd, 2026 @ 01:45 PM
There’s still a lot of debate around what actually counts
as a “good” NPS in hospitality, especially as guest
expectations keep shifting. In general, industry averages often
place a “good” score somewhere above 30, and anything
above 50 is considered strong. However, these global benchmarks can
be misleading because they blend very different types of
properties, from budget hotels to ultra-luxury resorts.
This is why many argue that hotels should not rely too heavily on
global averages. A luxury property, for example, is usually
expected to operate at a much higher standard of service, meaning
its target NPS should realistically be higher than a budget hotel.
At the same time, budget and midscale hotels may still be
performing well even if they sit closer to the global average, as
their guest expectations are different by design.
In practice, hotel
NPS becomes more meaningful when it’s compared within a
specific segment rather than across the entire industry.
Segment-based benchmarks give a clearer picture of performance and
help hotels set targets that reflect their actual guest promise,
rather than chasing a universal number that doesn’t account
for context.
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