Wellness Is No Longer an Amenity. It’s a Revenue Strategy for Hotels
2025 saw the hospitality industry face rising operating costs, cautious consumer spending, and pressure on room rates. Yet despite these headwinds, many UK hotels finished the year stronger than expected.
One reason stands out clearly: wellness.
According to research from Knight Frank, leisure revenues at UK hotels with wellness offerings increased by around 6% per occupied room in 2025, as travellers increasingly prioritised health, wellbeing and experiential travel.
What was once seen as a “nice-to-have” amenity is now proving to be one of the most reliable drivers of ancillary revenue and guest engagement.
And the implication for hotel operators is clear: wellness is no longer simply about guest experience. It’s about commercial performance.
The rise of wellness-led hospitality
Demand for wellness-focused travel has been building for years, but it accelerated significantly after the pandemic. Today’s travellers are looking for experiences that support physical, mental and social wellbeing, whether that’s fitness, spa treatments, recovery therapies, or mindful escapes.
Hotels with strong wellness offerings are benefiting directly from this shift. Knight Frank’s latest UK Hotel Trading Performance Review highlights that leisure revenues have grown substantially since 2019, supported by rising memberships, spa visits and wellness experiences.
Hotel leisure clubs in particular are seeing multi-generational demand, with both younger and older guests prioritising health and fitness in their travel choices. TRYBE data has found that 24-25 year olds are the highest spenders when it comes to wellness, and this is prioritised over traditional indulgences such as nightlife.
For hotels navigating tighter margins and rising labour costs, this represents an important opportunity: wellness drives both guest loyalty and incremental revenue, especially in younger guests.
From cost centre to revenue engine
Historically, wellness facilities such as gyms or spas were often treated as supporting amenities, valuable for brand perception but not necessarily central to profitability.
That thinking is rapidly changing.
Today, operational excellence won’t save margins. Forward-thinking operators are transforming wellness into a multi-layered revenue stream, including:
Day spa packages and treatments
Wellness memberships for local communities
Recovery and fitness experiences
Personalisation and upselling opportunities
Integrated wellness retreats and packages
TRYBE data has found that when upselling and personalisation is built directly into a booking journey, results speak for themselves. In 2025, the average upsell value through TRYBE was £266; automated upsells that feel organic are consistently outperform manual selling.
In other words, wellness spaces are evolving from static facilities into dynamic commercial assets.
The local community opportunity
One of the most powerful, and often underutilised, drivers of wellness revenue is the local membership model.
Rather than serving only overnight guests, hotels can position their wellness facilities as hubs for the surrounding community. According to industry research, hotel leisure clubs are increasingly functioning as social wellness spaces where local members interact alongside hotel guests.
This creates multiple advantages:
Recurring membership revenue
Higher utilisation of existing facilities
Stronger brand affinity with local audiences
Additional food, beverage and retail spend
It also helps stabilise revenue streams, reducing reliance on seasonal occupancy.
The next step: connected wellness ecosystems
While the demand for wellness is clear, the operational challenge for hotels is how to unlock its full commercial potential.
This is where the next wave of innovation is emerging.
Digital platforms, integrated booking systems and community-driven wellness models are enabling hotels to:
Monetise underutilised wellness spaces
Manage memberships more effectively
Connect local communities with hotel experiences
Package wellness offerings with stays, events and corporate programmes
The result is a more connected wellness ecosystem, one where hotels operate not just as accommodation providers, but as wellbeing destinations.
A strategic opportunity for hospitality
As operating costs continue to rise across the hotel sector, revenue diversification is becoming essential.
Rooms and traditional F&B alone are no longer enough to sustain margins. But wellness, when approached strategically, offers something rare in hospitality: a revenue stream that simultaneously increases guest satisfaction, brand differentiation and profitability.
The hotels that recognise this shift and invest in scalable wellness experiences will be best positioned to capture the next phase of growth.
Because in modern hospitality, wellness isn’t just part of the experience.
Want to chat to the team? Book a call with us to find out more.