For the week of 2-8 October 2022, U.S. hotel occupancy increased 1.9 percentage points (ppts) week on week (WoW) to 68.2%, which was aligned with historical trends and expectations. Excluding Florida, where demand was lifted by post-Hurricane Ian demand, occupancy was up 1.2 ppts WoW to 68.0%. Occupancy with Florida was also up 4.3 ppts compared with a year ago (+3.8 ppts without Florida). Nationally, the week started slow due to Yom Kippur but increased into the weekend, coinciding with school fall breaks and the Columbus/Indigenous Peoples’ Day holiday weekend. Nominal average daily rate (ADR) increased 2.6% WoW to US$154, which was 17% higher than in the comparable week of 2019 and 14% above a year ago. Nominal ADR without Florida increased 1.8% WoW. Nominal revenue per available room (RevPAR) was up 5.5% WoW to US$105, which was 13% higher than in 2019 and 21% better than a year ago. Nominal RevPAR without Florida increased 3.5% WoW.
Taking a closer look at the U.S. excluding Florida, weekday occupancy was down 2.2 percentage points on Tuesday and Wednesday due to Yom Kippur. Eight of the Top 25 Markets, excluding the three from Florida, saw weekday occupancy decrease by five or more percentage points week on week. Markets in that group included Boston, Chicago, New York City, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C. Even with the decline, weekday occupancy in Boston and New York remained in the mid-to-high 70% range with Boston leading at 77.8%. Weekday occupancy in Chicago and Washington, D.C. was in the low 60s.
Occupancy was basically flat (-0.2ppts WoW) Sunday and Monday. From Thursday through Saturday, however, occupancy showed solid growth with a 1.1-percentage-point increase on Thursday and a 5.7-percentage-point rise on Friday/Saturday. That weekend jump was due to fall break for many schools, particularly in the south, as well as additional leisure opportunity via the extended weekend ahead of Columbus/Indigenous Peoples’ Day. According to STR’s School Break Report, half of all the K-12 schools that began the fall term in August were on fall break in the week that just ended and into the one current at the time of writing.
For only the second time this year, and fifth since the start of the pandemic, weekend occupancy (excluding Florida) surpassed 80%. If you include Florida, weekend occupancy was 80.4% or 0.2 percentage points better. While good, nationwide occupancy for the same weekend in 2019 was 82%, as slightly less rooms were sold this year (-16,500) and supply is up 2%.
Of the 153 STR-defined U.S. markets outside of Florida, weekend occupancy was above 90% in 15 markets with another 61 (40%) above 80%. There were no markets nationwide with occupancy below 60%, which was a first since the weekend of 15-16 July 2022. Gatlinburg/Pigeon Forge, Tennessee (97%) had the nation’s highest weekend occupancy even when including Florida and was followed by San Diego (94%). NYC had the nation’s fifth highest weekend occupancy at 93%.
For the entire week, market occupancy (excluding Florida) ranged from 89% in Vermont to 53% in the New Jersey Shore. If you include Florida, the nation’s lowest weekly occupancy was seen in Daytona Beach (51%). Even with the midweek religious observance, only 16 non-Florida markets reported weekly occupancy below 60%, which was the least amount of the past nine weeks. The largest year-over-year occupancy decrease was seen in Louisiana South (-19ppts), which a year ago saw elevated occupancy after Hurricane Ida. Among the major markets not in Florida, occupancy ranged from 58% in New Orleans to 80% in both Anaheim and New York City.