Calculate hotel walk rate as walked guests divided by arrivals. Monitor overbooking outcomes and minimise guest displacement costs.
The walk rate measures the percentage of arriving guests who must be relocated to another hotel because the property is oversold. It is calculated by dividing the number of walked guests by total arrivals and multiplying by 100. This is the outcome metric that reveals whether your overbooking strategy is calibrated correctly.
While overbooking is essential for maximising revenue on sold-out nights, walks carry significant financial and reputational costs. Each walk typically costs the hotel the competitor room charge, transportation, guest compensation, and potential loss of future bookings. For loyalty-programme members, a walk can trigger churn that far exceeds the value of the single night's revenue.
This calculator helps front-office managers and revenue leaders track walk frequency, calculate walk rates by period, and establish acceptable thresholds. The goal is not to eliminate walks entirely — some are inevitable in an optimised overbooking model — but to keep them within a controlled, financially justified range.
Walk rate is the feedback loop for your overbooking strategy. A walk rate of zero may mean you are leaving rooms empty. A rate that is too high signals excessive overbooking or inaccurate attrition forecasts. Tracking this metric over time keeps your overbooking model honest and your walk costs manageable.
Walk Rate (%) = (Walked Guests ÷ Total Arrivals) × 100
Result: 2.00%
3 walked guests ÷ 150 arrivals × 100 = 2.00% walk rate. Two percent of arriving guests had to be relocated to another property.
Walk rate is the mirror image of overbooking percentage. While overbooking measures intent (how far beyond capacity you sold), walk rate measures outcome (how many guests you actually had to relocate). A well-tuned revenue management operation can overbook at 10% yet maintain a walk rate below 1% because most of the overbooking is absorbed by cancellations and no-shows.
Every walk should be documented with full cost accounting: competitor room charge, transportation, staff time, guest compensation, and an estimate of lifetime value impact. Aggregating these costs monthly provides the data needed to set the optimal overbooking ceiling — the point where expected walk costs begin to exceed expected incremental room revenue.
Before walking a guest, exhaust all alternatives: upgrade to a premium room type, offer a suite at the standard rate, or negotiate an early departure with a current guest in exchange for a future stay credit. These options are almost always cheaper and more guest-friendly than an external walk.
Most well-managed hotels target a walk rate below 1% of arrivals. Some revenue management teams accept up to 2% on high-demand nights where the incremental overbooking revenue significantly outweighs walk costs.
Walk costs typically include the competitor hotel room (often at rack rate), transportation, a compensation voucher or points, and an apology amenity. Total direct costs range from $150 to $500+ per walk depending on the market.
Walk priority should be based on guest value. OTA single-night bookings at the lowest rate are walked first. Loyalty members, direct bookers, VIPs, and multi-night guests should be protected from walks.
Improve your cancellation and no-show forecasting accuracy. Better data means you can overbook more precisely. Also consider upgrading oversold guests to premium rooms before resorting to walks.
Not necessarily. A sustained zero walk rate may indicate you are under-booking and leaving rooms unsold. Some walks are the natural consequence of an optimised overbooking strategy that maximises total revenue.
Poorly executed walks generate negative reviews and loyalty programme complaints. However, a well-handled walk — with proactive communication, a smooth transfer, and generous compensation — can actually strengthen the guest relationship.