The purpose of this SOP is to support water-saving efforts in hotels that lack a full metering infrastructure by using estimates, operational tracking, and team involvement to monitor water use, detect leaks and inefficiencies, and guide practical improvements.
Step 1: Estimate Total Water Use Based on Occupancy and Operational Activity
Establish a water use baseline using available data:
Start by reviewing monthly water bills or delivery records to determine average total consumption.
Calculate guest nights and divide water consumption per guest night to obtain average consumption data
Use benchmarks relevant to your destination such as litres per guest night depending on hotel category and its facilities to determine your performance compared with similar properties in your area
Record daily and weekly indicators to track water-related activity:
Occupancy rates
Laundry loads (kgs or number of cycles)
Number of meals served (kitchen output)
Irrigation and garden watering schedules
Pool top-ups or backwash cycles
Use logs to capture data consistently:
Create a simple table or logbook that tracks these activities.
Aim to identify patterns and establish a baseline for ‘normal’ water use.
Refine the estimate over time:
Compare recorded activities to changes in water bills or tank refills.
Adjust your estimated usage per activity as patterns become clearer.
Step 2: Track Water Bills and Delivery Volumes
Set up a central water tracking file:
Collect all water bills (municipal or private) and delivery receipts.
Create a spreadsheet to track monthly usage volumes and costs over time.
Log key information monthly:
Volume consumed (in m3 or litres)
Cost per unit of water
Total spend
Source (e.g. borehole, municipal supply, tanker delivery)
Identify trends and anomalies:
Look for sudden increases in volume or cost that may suggest leaks or operational changes.
Relate usage to occupancy levels and seasons.
Visualise data:
Use graphs or charts to show trends over several months.
This helps make patterns clear and can be shared easily with staff.
Step 3: Monitor Key Water-Intensive Activities
Identify your main areas of water use:
Laundry
Kitchen
Pool and garden maintenance
Room cleaning (showers, toilets, amenities)
Create manual logs for each area:
Laundry: number of cycles per day/week, machine load sizes
Kitchen: number of meals served, dishwasher cycles
Housekeeping: frequency of towel/linen changes including pool towels
Garden: watering schedule (frequency, duration, manual or automated)
Pools: water top-up frequency and estimated volume
Use logs to spot inefficiencies:
Compare week-to-week data
Monitor spikes or irregularities
Involve staff in daily or weekly tracking:
Provide simple forms or checklists
Assign staff responsibility for updating logs
Step 4: Measure Flow Rates at Key Fixtures
Measure key fixtures in a sample of rooms and spaces:
Taps in handwashing basins and bidets (Ideal 5 litres or less per minute)
Showers (Ideal 10 litres or less per minute)
Toilet flushes (Ideal is no more than 6.5 per full flush)
Urinals (Ideal is 2 litres per flush or less)
Note: Bath taps aren’t usually worth measuring, as most guests who decide to take a bath will fill it regardless of the flow rate. That said, if the flow is especially slow, it might discourage some guests from running a bath at all.
If you do not have a flow-rate measurer, use a flow rate testing method instead:
Use a container of known volume (e.g. 1-litre jug)
Time how long it takes (in seconds) to fill the container from each water outlet
Convert the results to litres per minute (litres/min) (e.g. if the 1-litre jug fills in 10 seconds, then the flow rate would be 6 litres per minute.)
Document flow rates by room type or zone:
Compare across different rooms and fixture types to spot unusually high rates or inconsistencies. Sometimes due to pressure, the flow rate can be higher from outlets that are situated close to water tanks as the water has less distance to travel. Depending on where water tanks are situated, gravity may also impact the flows as will the location of supporting water pumps.
Document flows regularly, at least annually as some aerators and flow restrictors become less efficient over time and need removal for cleaning or replacement.
Take corrective action:
Adjust flows by opening or closing the water shut-off valves located underneath the sink
Install aerators or flow restrictors
Replace or repair high-flow fixtures
Monitor for improvements after the intervention
Step 5: Encourage Staff to Observe and Report Water Waste
Train staff to spot signs of water waste:
Dripping taps
Continuously running or refilling toilets
Damp patches near pipes or walls
Pool overflow or leaks
Create simple systems for reporting:
WhatsApp groups (take care with WhatsApp groups - messages can easily be missed and employees should not receive work-related messages to their personal mobile telephones)
Maintenance logbooks
Daily staff briefings or whiteboards
Empower all departments to participate:
Housekeeping, kitchen, maintenance, food & beverage, spa and reception teams can all contribute
Recognise and act on their feedback promptly
Foster a culture of shared responsibility:
Reinforce that saving water benefits everyone, operationally and environmentally
Incentivise staff to help find and report leaks, for example
Run an annual ‘Water Saver Challenge’ where staff are encouraged to report leaks, drips, or inefficient fixtures. Recognize the most active member of staff with a small reward or public appreciation.
Make leak detection a game during a dedicated Water Awareness Week and reward the team or individual who identifies the most potential water-saving fixes.
Hold a property-wide water check once or twice a year, turning it into a friendly competition. Offer a small incentive for the person or team that reports the most useful water-saving observations
Step 6: Detect Leaks Without Sub-Meters
Monitor overnight water usage:
Check tanks or water levels last thing at night and again in the early morning
Unexpected drops may suggest leaks
Cross-reference billing data and activity logs:
Sudden increases in monthly water costs without a rise in occupancy may indicate hidden leaks
Use visual inspections regularly:
Conduct weekly walk-throughs of back-of-house and garden areas
Look for pooling water, soft ground, or wet walls
Pay close attention to toilets:
Silent leaks can be costly
Toilets are often the largest source of hidden water loss. Equip staff and guests to report these issues urgently and ensure prompt repair. The Housekeeping Water Reduction Checklist is quick and easy to implement.
Use dye tablets or food colouring in cisterns to check if water seeps into the bowl without flushing
Step 7: Review and Improve
Monthly:
Summarise activity logs and water consumption (from bills or deliveries)
Compare with occupancy and operational activity
Note any irregularities, improvements, or concerns
Share findings with department heads
Quarterly:
Review flow rate data and make updates where needed
Evaluate the impact of any water-saving measures implemented
Adjust procedures and staff responsibilities if gaps are found
Annually:
Review total water use and cost over the year
Calculate estimated litres per guest night for better benchmarking
Set realistic water-saving targets for the next year
Identify areas for low-cost upgrades or behaviour-change initiatives
Use the review process to build support for future investment in sub-meters or digital monitoring systems