Key Takeaways
- Although down from last year’s record-breaking levels, Thanksgiving week performance in the U.S. was normal.
- Destination markets posted the highest occupancy in the U.S.
- New York City’s return to normalcy continues
- Global occupancy was down.
- Qatar picked up early wins from the World Cup.
- Caribbean/Latin American countries, like Barbados, are generating momentum as vacation season begins.
In what turned out to be a normal Thanksgiving week, U.S. hotel occupancy for 20-26 November was 50.4%. That was down from 52.9% a year ago and 50.6% in 2019. Nearly every market saw occupancy fall year over year despite more airline travel, which was 95% of 2019’s volume. A year ago, 89 of the 166 STR-defined U.S. markets saw occupancy above 50%. This year, 64 markets saw the same, which was close to the tally in 2019.
Recall, last year’s occupancy was the highest ever recorded for Thanksgiving week due to the aftermath of COVID lockdowns, which created pent-up demand and a greater desire to be with friends and family during the holiday.
Room demand was the second highest seen for Thanksgiving week going back to 2000. Last year’s Thanksgiving week was somewhat of an anomaly. As a ratio to the U.S. population, 6.1 of every 100 Americans booked a room in 2021 as compared with 5.9 this year. Additionally, 2021’s per capita amount was the highest ever seen while this year’s is in line with 2018/2019 and well beyond others. While many will ascribe this year’s Thanksgiving “weakness” to economic headwinds, the comparison to last year may be unfair given how unusually strong the week was a year ago. This year’s Thanksgiving week was normal and solid when considering historical context.