The Scotsman

Glasgow top of UK city list for growth in hotel industry

● Revenue per Glasgow hotel room rises eight times faster than the UK average

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpress.co.uk

The hotel sector in Glasgow is growing faster than in any other UK city, as the average cost for an overnight stay climbed 7.5 per cent in the first half of the year.

Accountanc­y firm Pwc’s latest hotels forecast reported the average daily rate in Scotland’s largest city rose to £73.41 from £68.31 in the past six months.

Glasgow’s revenue per available room (revpar), calculated by multiplyin­g the average achieved room rate by the average annual room occupancy rate, grew 8.2 per cent to £58.08, eight times the pace of growth in the UK overall.

By contrast, revpar in Edinburgh fell 1.6 per cent to £73.68, which the report attributed to an influx of new rooms and increased competitio­n from serviced apartments.

Despite this, the Scottish capital remains the most expensive city outside of London for an overnight hotel stay at an average daily rate of £93.92. The ongoing recovery in the oil and gas sector helped revpar in Aberdeen grow 4.7 per cent to £35.85 and lifted the occupancy rate, although this stayed low at 63.5 per cent.

Liz Hall, head of hospitalit­y and leisure research at PWC, said: “Glasgow’s reinventio­n as a modern city with internatio­nal appeal for both tourists and businesses continues, with the city’s hotels showing an impressive performanc­e, driven by the 7.5 per cent increase in average daily rate as more four-star hotels open.

“The performanc­e of Glasgow’s hotels sector highlights the extent to which the city is now seen as a major tourist attraction, with the number of internatio­nal visitors increasing by a fifth to 787,000 in 2017.”

“In Edinburgh, revpar remains the second highest of all UK cities, but this and occupancy rate have slipped, probably as a result of new room supply and also competitio­n from the home share market and serviced apartments.”

She added that hotels in Edinburgh remained “well placed”, with more than two million visitors in 2017 and record numbers of tourists attending the Fringe and Internatio­nal Festival this year.

The first half of 2018 brought close to £400 million investment in hotels in Scotland, more than double the full-year total for 2017.

The largest deal so far this year was the £85m sale of Edinburgh’s Caledonian Hotel to Abu Dhabi-based Twenty14 Holdings.

PWC forecasts a total deal volume for the UK hotel sector of around £6.8 billion by the end of the year, a 40 per cent increase from 2017. However, it predicts hotel trading growth will flatten in 2019 due to economic uncertaint­y, weak business travel demand and an influx of new rooms.

Sam Ward, UK hotels leader at PWC, said: “We anticipate a slowdown in portfolio deal activity in 2019 due to a combinatio­n of longer term investors entering the UK hotel market, US fund hotel portfolio owners taking advantage of the favourable low-cost debt terms currently available and uncertaint­y around leaving the European Union.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom