With Halloween on Monday during the week of 30 October through 5 November (week 45), U.S. hotel demand and occupancy saw a sharp decrease Sunday and Monday with the declines lingering into Tuesday and to a lesser extent Wednesday. As a result, weekly demand fell 5.7% week on week (WoW), slightly more than expected. Weekly occupancy dropped to 62.4%, its third consecutive weekly decline. As compared to the seven other times since 2000 when Halloween was in week 45, this year’s weekly occupancy was the third highest. Some of the impact to occupancy is supply related, as room demand for the week was the highest of the times Halloween was in week 45. Compared to all other week 45 results, demand was the fourth highest.
Nominal average daily rate (ADR) also fell 3.7% WoW to US$148, leading to an 8.6% decrease in nominal revenue per available room (RevPAR). This was the second week that RevPAR fell by more than 8% WoW. Real (inflation-adjusted) ADR and RevPAR also decreased, with both measures below what was seen in 2019. However, in 2019 there was no impact from Halloween as it fell on the previous Thursday that year. As compared to last year, ADR and RevPAR were 15% and 20% higher, respectively.
Reviewing past Halloween weeks regardless of which week it fell in (44 or 45), this year’s demand was the highest on record, previously held in 2019. Occupancy, however, was the sixth highest of the 23 years of data but close to the level seen in 2019 (62.4% vs. 62.5%).