Cape Breton Post

U.S. summer travellers should expect long lines, higher prices

- DOYINSOLA OLADIPO

With more U.S. travelers expected to take to the skies and the roads this summer as COVID restrictio­ns ease, unbridled demand will strain capacity in the leisure and travel industry and push prices even higher.

Airlines, hotels, rental car companies and booking sites all reported a surge in demand for their services in the latest batch of company earnings. But at the same time, many of those companies face a tight labor market and limited volume as they scramble to restart and expand operations after more than two years of depressed demand due to the pandemic.

Tripadviso­r said travelers should expect inflation to impact all areas of travel purchases in 2022, and booking now versus later can mean locking in better prices.

Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc plans to continue to reprice hotel rooms “every minute of the day” to limit the impact inflation has on its business, CEO Christophe­r Nassetta told investors on Tuesday.

“As demand has picked up, we have certainly been able to do that and we expect that we will continue to be able to do that,” he said on the company’s earnings call.

Hilton’s average daily rates in the United States were 36.4 per cent higher in the first quarter of 2022 compared to the same period in 2021. Average daily rates across hotel companies in the U.S. were up approximat­ely 37.7 per cent in the first quarter of 2022 when compared to the same period in 2021, according to hotel industry data from Smith Travel Research Inc.

The price of flights this summer are also trending higher, according to travel search engine Skyscanner. Round trip flights within the U.S. will cost $302 per traveler on average, which is three per cent higher during the same period pre-pandemic. Long and ultra-longhaul internatio­nal flights are up to 20 per cent higher than 2019, costing on average $797 and $1182 respective­ly.

Other segments within the travel industry are facing supply constraint­s and labor shortages as leisure and business travelers also return.

Car rental firm Hertz Global Holdings reported it averaged about 481,000 vehicles during the first quarter of 2022 compared to a pre-pandemic level of approximat­ely 700,000 vehicles.

“There’s little question that as demand moves even higher in the summer season, you’ll see [utilizatio­n] stress further,” said Hertz CEO Stephen Scherr, adding that the available supply of vehicles is limited and needs to be managed very carefully.

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