Hostelworld H1 2026: Strong revenue growth and rising commission rates offset weak booking volumes. Full-year guidance reiterated.
This article covers information on Hostelworld Group PLC.
LON:HSWLast updated:
This is a solid trading update from Hostelworld. The headline numbers are good, management has reiterated full-year guidance, and the business is showing it can squeeze more revenue out of each booking even while travel demand has been disrupted by the conflict in the Middle East.
For retail investors, the key point is simple: Hostelworld is growing revenue faster than transaction volumes. That is usually a sign that pricing power, product mix, or marketplace economics are improving. In this case, the main driver is its monetisation tool, Elevate, which is pushing commission rates higher.
| Metric | H1 2026 | H1 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net revenue | €52.2m | Not disclosed in the table, implied prior year base | +12% YoY |
| Revenue per transaction | €14.9 | Not disclosed directly | +11% YoY |
| Net transactions | 3.8m | Not disclosed directly | +1% YoY |
| Effective commission rate | 17.7% | 15.8% | +1.9 percentage points |
| Direct marketing costs as % of revenue | 49% | 51% | Improved |
| Adjusted EBITDA | €8.2m | €7.4m | +11% YoY |
| Adjusted EBITDA margin | 16% | 16% | Flat |
| Closing cash | €15.0m | Not disclosed | Not disclosed |
| Net cash | €2.5m | Not disclosed | Not disclosed |
At first glance, 3.8 million net transactions, up just 1%, does not look especially exciting. But that number needs context. The company estimates the conflict in the Middle East reduced volume growth by around 3% in H1 2026, with Asia and Oceania hit hardest because longer-haul travel demand was weaker.
Strip that out and the underlying demand picture looks better than the headline suggests. Europe and North America were said to be more resilient, which is encouraging because it suggests this was not a broad-based slowdown across the whole platform.
More importantly, revenue per transaction rose 11% to €14.9. That means Hostelworld earned more from each booking, and that is a powerful lever in an online travel business.
The standout number in this update is the effective commission rate of 17.7%. That is up from 15.8% in H1 2025 and also ahead of 16.7% in H2 2025, so this is not a one-off blip. It shows the company is successfully monetising its marketplace more aggressively.
For anyone new to the jargon, the commission rate is the slice Hostelworld earns from bookings on its platform. If that rate rises without crushing demand, revenue can grow much faster than volumes. That is exactly what happened here.
Management says Elevate gives hostel partners flexibility to reflect the value of Hostelworld’s customer base. In plain English, Hostelworld believes its travellers are valuable enough that accommodation partners are willing to pay higher commission to win those bookings.
That is a positive sign. It points to a platform with some real pricing power, especially if its social features and international audience are helping partners fill beds they might not otherwise sell.
Another plus was direct marketing efficiency. Direct marketing costs fell to 49% of revenue from 51% a year earlier. That may not sound dramatic, but in digital platform businesses, small percentage improvements can meaningfully boost profit.
The company said this supported net margin growth of 16% to €22.9m. Adjusted EBITDA – earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, and adjusted for certain items – increased 11% to €8.2m.
The only mild catch is that the adjusted EBITDA margin stayed flat at 16%. So yes, profits are growing, but the business is not yet showing a step-change in operating leverage. Investors will probably want to see whether margin expansion improves in the second half if revenue momentum continues and disruption eases.
The group closed H1 2026 with €15.0m of cash and €2.5m of net cash. That matters. A net cash position means the balance sheet is not being stretched by debt, which is useful when the wider travel market is dealing with geopolitical uncertainty.
It also gives Hostelworld some breathing room to keep funding new products and integrations. That is important because part of the investment case here is not just hostel bookings, but whether the company can build a broader social travel platform.
Hostelworld highlighted progress on several growth initiatives. Its budget accommodation offering, launched in December 2025 through a third-party inventory supplier, is expanding across iOS, Android and mobile web in multiple languages.
It also said the OccasionGenius integration is on track, with event discovery due to go live in Q3 2026 across the platform. On top of that, Social Passes are broadening the addressable market.
Strategically, that all makes sense. If Hostelworld can become more than just a booking site and act more like a social travel platform, it could improve repeat usage, customer loyalty and lifetime value.
The background information helps explain why management is pushing in this direction. Since launching its social network in 2022, Hostelworld says it has welcomed over 4.0 million social members, and those members book about twice as frequently as non-members and are three times more likely to use the app.
That is promising, but there is a caveat. The update does not disclose the direct revenue contribution from budget accommodation, event discovery or Social Passes. So the strategic story is attractive, but investors still need proof of material earnings impact.
Management reiterated full-year guidance, which the market will usually take as a reassuring signal. It suggests trading so far is in line with expectations, despite disruption in some travel corridors.
That said, the guidance does rest on an important assumption. Hostelworld says it expects disruption linked to the Middle East conflict to ease in the second half and broader trading conditions to normalise.
That is reasonable, but it is not something the company controls. If geopolitical conditions worsen or longer-haul demand stays weak for longer, transaction growth could remain under pressure.
My read is broadly positive. Revenue growth of 12%, an improving commission rate, lower marketing intensity, higher EBITDA and a net cash balance sheet make for a decent package.
The best part is that Hostelworld is showing it can monetise its platform more effectively. That is usually a higher-quality form of growth than simply buying extra bookings through heavier marketing spend.
The weaker point is volumes. A 1% rise in net transactions is not enough on its own to get investors overly excited, even with the geopolitical explanation. The other thing to watch is margins, because EBITDA margin being flat suggests there is still work to do before stronger revenue fully drops through to profit.
Overall, though, this update keeps the investment case moving in the right direction. If H2 brings steadier travel demand and early traction from the newer platform features, Hostelworld could have more than one engine of growth working at once. That is why this RNS matters.
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