New York Post

Lotsa room at inn

Inflation hiking vacancy rates at budget hotels

- By LISA FICKENSCHE­R lfickensch­er@nypost.com

More than half the rooms at budget hotels nationwide were vacant during the first three months of 2024 as inflation-battered travelers cut back on spending, according to the latest data from the hotel industry.

Hotels like Econo Lodge, Days Inn, Super 8 and SureStay posted occupancy rates of 48.7% in the first quarter — down 5% from a year ago, according to preliminar­y first-quarter data from STR/ CoStar, which tracks the hotel industry.

The 51.3% vacancy rate has led to revenues per available room dropping 6.5% from the same period a year ago, the largest decline among all hotel segments, the data showed.

The results are “weaker than we thought,” Jan Freitag, national director for hospitalit­y market analytics at CoStar, told The Post on Tuesday.

Midscale hotels — the next level up from economy — which include chains like Best Western, saw revenue per room drop 4.5%. Uppermidsc­ale hotels, such as La Quinta, declined 2%. At the other end of the spectrum, luxury hotels suffered just a 0.3% revenue drop, while upper-upscale and upscale lodgings increased 3% and 0.4%, respective­ly.

“We are seeing a bifurcatio­n in the US lodging industry, where higher-end hotels continue to perform well from increases in corporate travel and continued healthy demand from highend leisure travelers, [while] people in a specific income level are traveling less,” Freitag said.

Room rates for luxury hotels are essentiall­y flat from a year ago at $453 per night on average, while rates at economy properties are down 4% over the same period to an average of $70 per night, according to STR/CoStar data.

In March, the occupancy rate at lower-end hotels was 53% compared with 71% in the luxury market, according to STR/CoStart data.

The actual revenue decline in the economy sector is likely greater because the number of rooms has decreased by 2% as some of the hotels have simply closed or were converted to residentia­l properties over the past year, according to the research firm.

But some budget properties are doing well, particular­ly in Sun Belt cities where a number of infrastruc­ture projects are fueling demand for inexpensiv­e rooms, according to a report in Skift.

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