A decrease in U.S. hotel demand and occupancy for the week of 23-29 October was expected and not as steep as previous years. The largest week-over-week declines were seen over the weekend (Friday & Saturday) with demand down 11% as travelers stayed home ahead of Halloween. The weekend accounted for 58% of the weekly fall in demand. Even with the decrease, room demand for the week was the highest for this specific week over the past 23 years. Weekly occupancy was 65.8%, down from 69.9% a week prior. In 2019, occupancy for the week was 62.5% as Halloween fell on a Thursday that year versus the following Monday this year. Nominal average daily rate (ADR) fell 2.9% week on week (WoW) to US$153, which was 21% higher than in 2019 and 19% greater than a year ago. With the fall in both occupancy and ADR, nominal revenue per available room (RevPAR) retreated 8.6% WoW to US$101, up 28% over the same week in 2019 and 34% higher than a year ago. Adjusting for inflation, both revenue measures were ahead of 2019 with real RevPAR 11% higher than what it was three years ago.
In 15 of the past 23 years, Halloween has fallen in this specific week (week 44). This year, Halloween was on the Monday of week 45 for only the fourth time since STR began benchmarking daily data (2022, 2005, 2011, 2016). While the WoW demand drop (-5.9%) was among the largest seen since the start of the year, compared with the previous three times that Halloween was on a Monday, this year’s decrease was the smallest. Even if we include the three times that Halloween fell on the Sunday of week 45, this particular WoW demand loss was the smallest. Of course, in the weeks that have had Halloween in week 44, the WoW demand drop was more than double what we saw this year. Thus, the demand decline for the week was normal with another expected for week 45.