Countries included: China, Curaçao, Fiji, Indonesia, Ireland, Japan, Spain, United Arab Emirates, and United States
Analysis by Isaac Collazo and Chris Klauda
U.S. Performance
In the first week of October, U.S. hotel industry occupancy climbed to 67.8%, which was just 0.1 percentage points (ppts) higher than last year. Remember, the comparable week last year included the Yom Kippur observance on Tuesday and Wednesday (4-5 October 2022). However, increases achieved against those easier weekday (Monday-Wednesday) comparisons were offset by weaker weekend occupancy. Overall, weekday occupancy increased 1.4% year over year (YoY), while the weekend and the shoulder periods (Thursday and Sunday) declined 1.9ppts and 0.7ppts, respectively.
A more significant change was seen in average daily rate (ADR), which rose by the largest amount (+5.4% YoY) since early May and exceeded the rate of inflation. Again, easy year-over-year comparisons on weekdays likely played a role, but over the past five weeks, ADR has continued to increase steadily. Revenue per available room (RevPAR) increased 5.2% YoY, the second consecutive week at that level.