How hotels cut their electricity bill by 20–35% without guest complaints
Energy saving · 9 min read · Updated 2026-04-02
TL;DR
The single biggest saving lever in hotels is HVAC — typically 50–60% of the bill. Combine guest-room occupancy automation, chiller set-point optimisation, AHU VFDs and IoT metering for audit-grade savings of 20–35%.
Where hotel electricity actually goes
- —HVAC (chillers + AHU + FCU) — 50–60%
- —Kitchen + laundry — 10–15%
- —Guest-room loads — 10–15%
- —Lighting (public + rooms) — 8–12%
- —Lifts, pumps, back-of-house — 5–8%
Top 8 savings interventions (ranked by ROI)
- —Guest-room occupancy-linked AC setback (2–3°C when unoccupied) — 3–6 month payback.
- —Chiller set-point optimisation based on outdoor air and return-water temperature.
- —AHU/PAHU VFDs with pressure-independent control.
- —Condenser water and cooling tower approach optimisation.
- —Laundry heat recovery and off-peak scheduling.
- —Kitchen hood demand-control ventilation.
- —Lighting: LED + daylight + scene scheduling in public areas.
- —DG fuel theft prevention with IoT (Enlog DG monitoring).
Frequently asked questions
How much can a mid-size hotel realistically save?
A 100–200 room 4-star hotel typically saves 15–25% of its annual electricity bill within 12 months of a structured programme. 4-star+ hotels with high chiller load save more.
Do guests complain when HVAC is automated?
Only if done poorly. Proper occupancy automation keeps the set-point comfortable while the guest is present and only setbacks when the room is empty. Guest satisfaction scores typically go up, not down.