Taxes, Salaries, and Sectors

Service Accounting (Restaurants, Hotels, and Banks)

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Service Sector Hospitality • Food & Beverage • Banking • Departmental Profitability

Service Accounting (Restaurants, Hotels, and Banks): Core Specifics

Service accounting is the engine behind “intangible” businesses. Unlike trade, your product is “time” or “expertise” or “hospitality.” This means your service costing logic focuses on labor, overhead, and departmental profitability. Whether you manage a restaurant, a hotel (USALI), or a bank—understanding these specifics is key to accurate financial reporting—Digital Salla.

Service accounting design with icons for hospitality, dining, and financial services.
Article Summary: How to calculate the cost of a “service” and measure profit for each department?
What will you gain from this article?
  • The fundamental logic of Service Accounting and the “Intangibility” challenge.
  • How to calculate Service Cost (Labor + Materials + Overhead).
  • Restaurant Accounting: Managing POS, COGS (Food Cost), and waste.
  • Hotel Accounting: An introduction to USALI and departmental profitability.
  • Bank Accounting: Liquidity, interest management, and provisions.
  • Monthly control Checklist + ready-made tools.

1) What is Service Accounting? (The Intangibility Challenge)

In service accounting, the product is consumed as it’s produced. There is no “inventory” of services in the traditional sense. This shift requires accounting to focus on Resource Utilization and Departmental Contribution rather than just physical margins.

Key Characteristics:
  • High Labor Component: People are the main cost driver.
  • No Finished Goods Inventory: Services cannot be stored for later sale.
  • Indirect Cost Allocation: Rent, utilities, and management are often large relative to direct costs.

2) Service Costing Logic: Labor, Materials, and Overhead

To determine the price and profitability of a service, you need to capture three elements:

The 3 Pillars of Service Cost
Cost Element Examples Measurement Method
Direct Labor Chef wages, Consultant hours, Teller salary Timesheets / Hourly rates
Direct Materials Food ingredients, Room amenities, Office supplies Issue notes / Consumption per service
Overhead (Indirect) Rent, Marketing, Administrative IT Allocation bases (Floor area / Revenue %)
Activity-Based Costing (ABC): Highly effective in service sectors because it links overhead costs to the specific activities that consume them (e.g., number of room cleanings, number of bank transactions).

3) Service Accounting Cycle: From Transaction to Profitability (SVG)

The service accounting cycle must capture revenue and costs simultaneously by department.

Service Accounting Flow: Direct & Indirect Paths Diagram showing: Revenue generation, Direct cost tracking, Overhead allocation, and Departmental Profit analysis. 1) Revenue Capture POS / Booking / Trans. 2) Direct Costs Labor + Raw Materials 3) Overhead Allocation Rent / Admin / IT 4) P&L By Dept.
The goal: Move from “Total Company Profit” to “Profit by Service Line/Department”.

4) Restaurant Accounting: Managing POS, Food Cost, and Waste

Restaurants are a hybrid: they manufacture a product (food) and provide a service (dining). The focus is on Food Cost (COGS) and Waste management.

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  • POS Reconciliations: Matching daily sales reports with cash, card, and delivery app settlements.
  • Theoretical vs. Actual Food Cost: Comparing what should have been consumed based on recipes (BOM) vs. what was actually used.
  • Waste Control: Daily tracking of spoilage, breakage, or return errors to protect the margin.
Complementary link for retailers/restaurants: For detail: Retail & POS Management

5) Hotel Accounting (USALI): Departmental Profitability

Hotels follow a global standard: the Uniform System of Accounts for the Lodging Industry (USALI). The core idea is to separate Operating Departments from Undistributed Expenses.

Hotel Departmental Structure (USALI)
Operating Departments Undistributed Expenses (Overhead)
Rooms (Occupancy/ADR) Administrative & General
Food & Beverage (F&B) Information & Telecom Systems
Other Operated Depts (Spa/Gym) Sales & Marketing
Miscellaneous Income Property Operation & Maintenance
Pro Indicator: GOPPAR (Gross Operating Profit Per Available Room) — a metric that reflects the manager’s ability to drive revenue and control departmental costs.

6) Bank Accounting: Liquidity, Interest, and Provisions

Banks operate under strict regulatory frameworks. Their “inventory” is cash, and their main revenue is the Net Interest Margin.

  • Liquidity Management: Ensuring enough cash is available to meet withdrawals while maximizing interest-earning assets.
  • Provisioning (IFRS 9): Calculating Expected Credit Losses (ECL) on loans and investments.
  • Asset & Liability Matching: Balancing the maturity dates of deposits (liabilities) and loans (assets) to manage interest rate risk.

7) Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for Service Sectors

Common indicators to measure efficiency and profitability in the service sector:

Sector Key KPI What does it measure?
Hospitality RevPAR Revenue per Available Room (Occupancy × ADR)
Dining Food Cost % Efficiency of ingredient use and menu pricing
Professional Utilization Rate Percentage of billable hours worked vs. total hours
Banking LDR Loan-to-Deposit Ratio (Liquidity indicator)

8) Monthly Review Checklist for Service Companies

Checklist

  • Revenue Audit: Match POS/Booking system reports with bank settlements and digital payments.
  • Payroll Allocation: Verify that labor hours are correctly assigned to the relevant departments.
  • Overhead Review: Adjust allocation bases for rent/utilities if operational shifts occurred.
  • Waste/Spoilage Report: Review variance between theoretical and actual consumption (F&B).
  • Accruals: Ensure unbilled services (WIP) and unpaid departmental expenses are recorded.

9) Ready-made Tools for Service Accounting Management

Daily POS and Cash Reconciliation – Excel Template

Essential for restaurants and hotel outlets. Reconciles daily sales with physical cash, card receipts, and delivery app statements.

Specialized Sector Chart of Accounts Library – Ready Excel Files

Includes pre-structured COA for Hotels (USALI-aligned) and Restaurants, allowing you to track revenue and expenses by department from Day 1.

10) Frequently Asked Questions

What is meant by Service Accounting?

It is accounting specialized in companies providing intangible products, focusing on labor costing and departmental profitability.

How is service cost calculated?

Service Cost = Direct Labor + Direct Materials + Allocated Overhead.

What is USALI?

The Uniform System of Accounts for the Lodging Industry—a global standard for hotel financial reporting.

11) Conclusion

Service accounting turns the intangible into measurable figures. By identifying service costs accurately, separating departmental profitability (especially in hotels and restaurants), and maintaining strict POS control, you gain the visibility needed to optimize pricing and resource allocation.

© Digital Salla Articles — General educational content. Specific accounting policies vary by local regulations and industry sub-sectors.