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A Hotel’s Guide to Key Card Margins

03/25/2026

Key cards rarely show up as their own line item on a hotel’s P&L, which is exactly why they are easy to under-budget. Treated correctly, though, a custom card program is a small, predictable operating cost that pays for itself many times over in brand impressions and guest perception.

The math is simpler than most operations teams assume once you separate card cost from the encoding and front-desk labor around it.

What actually goes into the cost per card

The unit price you are quoted covers material, decoration (full-color print or foil stamp), and encoding. On top of that, factor in a small buffer for damaged or lost cards during a guest’s stay, front-desk restocking labor, and periodic reprints when a promotional or seasonal design changes. For most properties, the true fully-loaded cost per issued card sits 15–25% above the base unit price once these are accounted for.

Property type Typical annual card volume Recommended order cadence
Boutique (50–150 rooms) 2,000–6,000 1–2 orders per year
Full-service resort 10,000–30,000 Quarterly or semi-annual
Multi-property group (5–15 hotels) 40,000–150,000 Centralized annual order, split-shipped
Franchise (15+ properties) 150,000+ Standing annual contract with top-up orders

Where the margin actually comes from

The return on a branded key card is not measured in card cost, it is measured in guest perception and repeat-stay signaling. A card that fades, cracks, or fails to encode reliably communicates a maintenance problem to every guest who touches it — a subtle but real drag on perceived property quality that costs far more in guest sentiment than the few cents saved on a cheaper card. Conversely, a well-made, on-brand card is one of the only physical objects nearly every guest carries during their stay, making it disproportionately efficient brand real estate per dollar spent.

Multi-property groups get the best margin outcome by consolidating card orders across the portfolio into fewer, larger purchase orders rather than letting each property order independently in small batches. Centralizing also standardizes card quality and appearance across the brand, which matters more as loyalty members move between properties.

Key takeawayBudget 15–25% above the quoted unit price to cover restocking and seasonal reprints, and consolidate multi-property orders into fewer, larger purchase orders to improve both margin and brand consistency.

Ready to price your property’s next card order? Get a custom quote — free mockups in 24–48 hours. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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