AI in Hotel Accounting: Separating Table Stakes from the Next Wave
Over the past few years, hospitality conferences have been buzzing about AI. Expo floors are filled with promises of AI-powered insights, intelligent automation, and machine learning, either built into their platforms or offered as add-ons. I’ve spent a lot of time walking those floors over the past year, hoping to see what the next wave of hospitality technology might actually look like. While I’ve seen some really great potential, more often than not, I’m left with more questions than answers. Once I started asking practical questions about when and how AI is being adapted into the workflows finance teams use every day, the answers often got a little vague. And in conversations with other finance leaders afterward, it’s clear many are sorting through the same uncertainty: what’s real today, what’s still on the roadmap, and what may not be practical yet. So let’s break down where AI in hotel accounting is actually delivering value today and how to evaluate the claims you’ll hear from vendors along the way. Table Stakes: What’s Actually Working in Hotel Accounting Right Now AI and automation in hotel accounting aren’t entirely new ideas. Many of the capabilities often described as “AI-powered” today have been quietly reshaping the back office for a little while now. At this point, these tools should be considered table stakes for modern hospitality accounting platforms. Here’s what should be included: End-to-end AP automation : Automatically capture invoice data, suggest coding, and route invoices through approval workflows, rather than spending hours doing it manually. Smart bank reconciliation : Pull daily bank feeds directly into the accounting system and match them against the general ledger to produce clean reconciliations while surfacing discrepancies that require attention. Daily PMS reconciliation: Reduce manual journal entries required to close the books each day with automatic reconciliation of revenue and operational data flowing out of property management systems. Automated approval workflows: Move invoices and payments through structured workflows with built-in routing, escalation rules, and audit trails rather than trying to coordinate approvals through email or spreadsheets. Anomaly detection: Scan AP and GL activity to flag duplicate invoices, unusual postings, or sudden shifts in spending patterns that may require closer review. The important thing to keep in mind here is that all of this only works as well as the data underneath it. Sure, AI can synthesize information from multiple systems, but it can’t decide which number is correct if those systems are producing conflicting answers. To get the best results from AI, it’s essential to have a single source of truth. A hospitality ERP does that. It provides a clean foundation layer that AI can pull from, so you know the insights it produces are actually useful. Next Wave Capabilities: What Finance Teams Should Expect Near Term The first wave of AI in hotel accounting focused on doing what AI does best (automating repetitive work), but what’s on the horizon is a bit more exciting. Instead of just helping you process transitions, the tools of tomorrow are going
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