For a fourth consecutive week, U.S. room demand declined week on week (WoW) with occupancy settling at 67.3%, which was 1.2 percentage points lower than the week prior. The decrease in room demand and occupancy is normal for this time of year. Falling by 460,000 rooms, the demand decrease was among the lowest of the past 22 years for this specific week. On average from 2000-2019, the WoW demand decline for this period was 4.1%. This year it was just 1.7%. Nominal average daily rate (ADR) fell 1.1% WoW to US$151, which is 17% higher than in 2019 and 10% greater than a year ago. Nominal revenue per available room (RevPAR) contracted 2.8% WoW to US$102. Nominal RevPAR remained ahead of 2019 by 12% and was up 17% from a year ago. Real (inflation-adjusted) ADR was ahead of 2019 (+1%) whereas real RevPAR was below that benchmark by 3%.
Unlike the previous week, demand fell across all days with the weekend (Friday & Saturday) seeing a slightly larger decrease (-2% WoW) as compared with -1.7% on weekdays (Monday-Wednesday) and -1.5% on shoulder days (Sunday & Thursday). Overall, the largest week-on-week declines were seen in non-Top 25 Markets (-1.9%), particularly on the weekend (-3%). We surmise that the primary driver of the demand declines is the start of K-12 schools. This past week, another nine states, including Texas, saw a significant increase (>50%) in the number of school districts beginning fall classes. Overall, 64% of K-12 school districts covered in STR’s 2022-23 School Break Report have begun the school year.
Weekday occupancy slipped one percentage point to 67%. Denver, New York, and Seattle all saw weekday occupancy above 75% as did 23 other markets outside the Top 25, with Portland, ME, posting the highest weekly occupancy of all markets (91%). Top 25 weekday occupancy mirrored the industry. Central Business Districts (CBDs), however, saw a sharper decline with weekday occupancy falling 2.5 percentage points week on week to 64%. There were a few standouts as Chicago, Los Angeles, St. Louis, and Tampa all saw weekday growth. CBD weekday occupancy ranged from 78% in the Boston CBD to 40% in the New Orleans CBD/French Quarter submarket.