Capsule Hotels · Returns & Finance · 2026

Capsule Hotel ROI Australia — revenue, yield and payback

Detailed scenario modelling for 5-key, 10-key and 20-key projects. ADR benchmarks by location tier, net yield analysis, and realistic payback period calculations.

Net yield 23–38% Payback from 2.6 years 3 location tiers modelled
23–38%Net yield range — Tier 1–2 locations, 10-key project
2.6 yrsFastest payback — Tier 1, 75% occ., $380 ADR
$958KPeak gross — 10-key Jetstone, 75% occ., $350 ADR
$50/nightADR increase adds ~$122K gross/yr on 10 keys

The investment case for a capsule hotel is built on one fundamental advantage — achieving $250–$600+/night ADR from per-key capex that is 60–70% below traditional hotel construction. That compression creates yield profiles that established hotel developers rarely see outside gateway city markets.

Three location tiers — three different return profiles

ADR is the single largest variable in a capsule hotel ROI calculation. Location tier determines the ADR ceiling, and ADR ceiling determines everything else. The following scenarios use a 10-key Jetstone project as the base case across three location tiers.

Tier 2 — Regional
Regional leisure market
$562,100
Gross annual revenue
ADR$220
Occupancy70%
All-in capex~$1.15M
Est. net (40% costs)$337K
Net yield~29%
Payback (net)~3.4 yrs
Tier 1 — Premium Leisure
Byron Bay, Mornington, Margaret River
$958,125
Gross annual revenue
ADR$350
Occupancy75%
All-in capex~$1.2M
Est. net (42% costs)$556K
Net yield~46%
Payback (net)~2.2 yrs
Tier 3 — Emerging
Peri-urban and emerging leisure
$401,500
Gross annual revenue
ADR$155
Occupancy71%
All-in capex~$1.05M
Est. net (38% costs)$249K
Net yield~24%
Payback (net)~4.2 yrs

Indicative estimates only. Actual results depend on location, management structure, operating costs and market conditions. Seek independent financial advice before making investment decisions.

ADR × occupancy matrix — 10-key Jetstone project

ADR sensitivity is the most important number in your feasibility. A $50/night increase across 10 keys and 365 nights generates an additional $182,500 gross per year at 100% occupancy — or approximately $122,000–$137,000 at 67–75% occupancy. The table below shows gross revenue at each intersection.

Occupancy$180/night$250/night$320/night$380/night$450/night
55%$361,350$501,875$642,400$762,650$902,250
62%$407,322$565,750$724,178$859,990$1,017,450
68%$447,372$620,750$794,528$943,228$1,116,450
75%$493,125$684,375$876,000$1,040,250$1,231,875
82%$539,154$748,210$957,858$1,137,306$1,345,950

Gross revenue only. Operating costs reduce this by 35–55% depending on management structure and operating model. Indicative estimates only — seek independent financial advice.

Operating costs — what actually comes off the gross

The gap between gross revenue and net income is where most feasibility models fall short. The ranges below reflect actual operating cost ratios for Australian short-stay commercial accommodation properties at comparable scale and ADR.

Cost categoryOwner-operatedThird-party managedNotes
Cleaning & linen8–11%10–14%Scales with occupancy
Property management fee0%18–28%% of gross; major variable
Booking platform fees3–15%3–15%Airbnb ~3%; Booking.com ~12–15%
Utilities3–5%3–6%Climate control dominant
Maintenance & insurance4–7%4–8%Higher in early years
Council rates & land tax1–3%1–3%Varies significantly by state
Total opex ratio19–41%39–74%Wide range — model your mix
Operator note

Owner-operated properties with a direct booking component (30–50% of bookings via own website) achieve the lowest effective platform fee ratio and the highest net margins. The capsule hotel business model guide covers the P&L structure of each operating model in detail.

Scale effects — how ROI changes as you add keys

Capsule hotel economics improve meaningfully as key count increases from 5 to 20 keys. Fixed operating costs (insurance, management overhead, compliance) are spread across more revenue-generating units, improving net margin at scale.

5-key project — entry scale

Lower capex entry ($495K–$750K all-in). Higher per-key operating cost ratio due to fixed cost spread. Management-intensive if owner-operated. Best suited to landowners testing the market or adding to an existing operation. Net yield typically 18–28% at Tier 2 locations.

10-key project — optimal scale

The most commonly modelled scale in the Australian market. Fixed costs diluted to workable ratio. Justifies third-party management without destroying margin. Net yield typically 23–38% at Tier 1–2 locations. All-in capex $1.0M–$1.5M.

20-key project — resort scale

Approaches boutique resort economics. Full management team justifiable. Revenue base ($1.4M–$2.5M gross at Tier 1–2) supports debt servicing for site acquisition. Net yield typically 28–42% when land cost is excluded from capex. Increasingly relevant to resort developers and tourism investors.

Juniper uplift — premium tier

Adding Juniper 2BR units to a Jetstone base configuration at a 30–50% ADR premium materially improves blended revenue. A 10-key project with 7 Jetsones + 3 Junipers at $350/$490 blended ADR, 72% occupancy generates approximately $1.12M gross. All-in capex increases by ~$120K–$180K.

Capsule hotel ROI versus traditional hotel development

The comparison is most useful at the boutique hotel scale (5–20 keys) where both formats compete directly. At this scale, traditional on-site construction per key typically ranges from $280,000–$650,000 in Australian coastal and regional markets — 3–6× the per-key capsule hotel capex — while achieving comparable or marginally higher ADR.

MetricTraditional boutique hotelCapsule hotel (Jetstone)
Per-key construction cost$280K–$650K$99K–$140K all-in
Build timeline18–36 months3–6 months order to open
ADR (Tier 1)$280–$500+$250–$600+
Gross payback period6–12 years1.8–3.5 years
Net payback period10–18 years3–7 years
RelocatabilityNoneYes — asset can be moved

Frequently asked questions

A 10-key Jetstone at $280/night ADR and 68% occupancy generates ~$694,960 gross annually. After 40–50% operating costs, net income is $347K–$417K on ~$1.1M–$1.5M capex — a net yield of 23–38% and payback of 2.6–4.3 years. Tier 1 locations (Byron Bay, Mornington, Margaret River) with $350+ ADR and 75%+ occupancy can push net yield above 40%. Indicative estimates only — seek independent financial advice.

Tier 1 leisure markets (Byron Bay, Mornington, Margaret River, Hunter Valley) consistently achieve $300–$500+/night for premium standalone capsule accommodation. Tier 2 regional markets: $200–$320/night. Tier 3 emerging markets: $150–$240/night. The Juniper 2BR commands a 30–50% ADR premium over Jetstone in the same precinct due to 270° panoramic glass walls and 2-bedroom configuration.

At Tier 1 benchmarks (75% occupancy, $350+ ADR, 10-key Jetstone, ~$1.2M capex) net payback is approximately 2.2–3 years. At Tier 2 (65% occupancy, $220 ADR) net payback extends to 4–6 years. A $50/night ADR increase on a 10-key project adds ~$122K–$137K gross per year. Payback is highly sensitive to ADR — location selection is the single most important ROI decision. Indicative estimates only — seek independent financial advice.

Owner-operated: total opex typically 19–41% of gross (cleaning 8–11%, platform fees 3–15%, utilities 3–5%, maintenance 4–7%, rates 1–3%). Third-party managed: total opex typically 39–74% (add management fee of 18–28%). Owner-operated with a direct booking component achieves the lowest effective cost ratio and highest net margin.

Traditional boutique hotel construction costs $280K–$650K per key in Australian coastal and regional markets. Capsule hotel all-in cost is $99K–$140K per key — 60–70% lower. Both achieve comparable ADR. Result: capsule hotel gross payback 1.8–3.5 years vs 6–12 years for traditional build; net payback 3–7 years vs 10–18 years. Capsule units are also relocatable — traditional construction is not.

Model your capsule hotel ROI

Send us your location, key count target and ADR benchmark — we will model the scenario and respond within 48 hours. No obligation.