Occupancy dipped in the latest week of reporting, falling 2.7 percentage points week on week to 63.9% during 1-7 May 2022. Travelers opted to stay home for Mother’s Day, and the largest decrease came on the weekend when occupancy fell 5.6 percentage points and accounted for 65% of the weekly demand loss. The impact of the Mother’s Day observance can also be seen in weekend group business, which declined by an amount similar to the Easter weekend (-203K). The news wasn’t all bad, however, as weekday (Monday-Wednesday) occupancy was down only 1.5 percentage points, and several key markets saw their highest occupancy levels of the pandemic-era. Weekly average daily rate (ADR) was basically flat (+0.3%), and revenue per available room (RevPAR) decreased 3.7%.
Comparing with past Mother’s Day weeks, it is normal for occupancy to fall from the preceding week. Further, the week of Mother’s Day has lost occupancy in 16 of the 20 years examined. This year’s Mother’s Day week decrease, however, was the largest since 2004. Reviewing segmentation, the largest share of the demand decline came from the group segment, which accounted for 74% of the room demand lost in the week. The largest loss of groups was on the weekend, when demand dropped by more than 300,000 room nights. The loss of weekend group demand was more than the total decrease in transient demand. In 2019, total group demand, primarily because of less weekend groups, also saw the largest decrease of any segment, but the decline in total demand was mitigated by growth in transient, contract and weekday group business.