Jonas Chorum links revenue systems
- Revenue Analytics and Jonas Chorum said on January 13, 2026 that they launched a two-way integration linking N2Pricing with Jonas Chorum’s hotel PMS. - The key plumbing runs through JonasARC, sending reservation, inventory, and rate data into N2Pricing and pushing optimized prices and restrictions back automatically. - That matters because hotel revenue teams still juggle manual exports; tighter PMS-RMS loops make faster pricing changes actually usable at property level.
Hotel revenue software is supposed to help hotels change prices faster and smarter. But the annoying part has never just been the math — it’s the handoff. Revenue Analytics and Jonas Chorum are trying to fix that gap with a new two-way integration, announced January 13, 2026, that links Revenue Analytics’ N2Pricing system directly with Jonas Chorum’s property-management software. The point is simple: fewer exports, fewer uploads, fewer stale numbers, and faster pricing moves inside actual hotel operations. ### What actually got connected? This is a link between two systems hotels already use for different jobs. Jonas Chorum runs the PMS side — reservations, inventory, rates, front-desk operations. Revenue Analytics runs the revenue-management side through N2Pricing, which helps hotels decide what rates and restrictions they should set. The integration connects those tools so data moves automatically instead of getting passed around by spreadsheet or manual entry. ### Why is “two-way” the important part? Because one-way integrations are common, but they only solve half the problem. Here, reservation, inventory, and rate data flow from Jonas Chorum into N2Pricing, so the pricing engine can work off current operating data. Then optimized prices and restrictions flow back into Jonas Chorum, so the hotel can actually publish and use those decisions without another manual step. Basically, the analysis and the execution stay in the same loop. ### What is JonasARC doing here? Jonas Chorum says the integration runs through JonasARC, its open API platform. That matters because API plumbing is what turns a partnership announcement into something operational. Instead of building a brittle custom connector for every property, the companies can use JonasARC as the standard path for moving data between the PMS and the RMS. It follows from how open API integration layers are used in hotel tech. ### Why do hotels care about this plumbing? Because pricing only helps if the rate change reaches the system that sells the room. A revenue manager can come up with the perfect number, but if somebody still has to rekey it into the PMS or distribution stack, speed disappears and mistakes creep in. Revenue Analytics is pitching this as a way to eliminate manual tasks, speed pricing cycles, and let teams work from the latest operating data instead of yesterday’s export. ### Is this just about big chains? Not really. Revenue Analytics has been pushing hotel products beyond the biggest enterprise accounts, including Climber RMS for independent hotels and regional groups, while Jonas Chorum sells cloud PMS tools across independents, management companies, chains, and extended-stay operators. So the overlap here is pretty practical — especially for multi-property operators that need consistency without adding more back-office work. ### Haven’t hotel systems integrated before? Yes — and that’s part of the context. Jonas Chorum has also announced a two-way integration with IDeaS, another major revenue-management vendor. Revenue Analytics itself lists a wide range of PMS and CRS integrations on its site. So the news is not that hotel tech discovered APIs in 2026. The news is that Revenue Analytics is filling another PMS gap and making N2Pricing easier to plug into a live hotel operating stack. ### What’s the real business angle? The fight in hotel software is increasingly about workflow, not just features. A pricing engine, a PMS, a CRS, and distribution tools all exist already. The vendor that wins is the one that makes those systems feel like one loop instead of four disconnected screens. That’s why this announcement matters more than the phrase “integration” usually sits in the middle. ### Bottom line This is boring infrastructure news — but in a useful way. Revenue Analytics and Jonas Chorum are closing the gap between deciding the right room price and getting that price live in the hotel system. In hotel revenue management, that gap is where a lot of value gets lost.