Performance during the week before the Memorial Day holiday (22-28 May 2022) came in lower than expected, as U.S. hotel occupancy fell to 66.5% from 68.6% the prior week. The decrease was the largest for the week ahead of the holiday since STR began publishing weekly data in 2000. Weekdays (Monday-Wednesday) accounted for roughly two-thirds of the weekly demand decline, with the weekend (Friday & Saturday) on par with the previous week. We believe that the previous week’s demand was enhanced by university graduation ceremonies that were exaggerated by the inclusion of the 2020 and 2021 classes. Average daily rate (ADR) held steadfast, declining just 0.1% compared to the previous week, while revenue per available room (RevPAR) tumbled 3.0%.
While a letdown to previous pre-Memorial Day weeks, weekly occupancy has been above 66% six times so far this year, compared to seven times during the entirely of 2021. None of those weeks in 2021 happened before the Memorial Day holiday. As compared to previous pre-Memorial Day weeks, this week’s occupancy was in the lower half of all previous Memorial Day lead-in weeks, with the highest occupancy (71.3%) observed in 2015 and the second highest in 2019 (71%). While this year’s level was unimpressive, actual room demand was the third highest of any pre-Memorial Day week (just below 2018) and 950,000 rooms less than 2019 – the year when the most rooms were sold on record for the aforementioned time period. Additionally, this week’s room demand was the eighth highest since the start of the pandemic and second best of the year.