October 2022 Top-Line Metrics (percentage change from October 2019)
- Occupancy: 67.2% (-2.4%)
- Average daily rate (ADR): US$155.63 (+16.8%)
- Revenue per available room (RevPAR): US$104.59 (+14.0%)
Key points from the month:
- U.S. hotel KPI indexes slowed month over month.
- The Halloween week shift, Jewish holidays, and Hurricane Ian all factored into October’s performance, but demand remained relatively flat compared with 2019.
- The Halloween and Ian impacts were most visible in weekend occupancy indexes, which declined considerably month over month.
- Weekday occupancy recovery remained in line with the prior month’s indexes as conference season wrapped up.
- Group demand remained strong and will likely continue as calendars are packed with events that were cancelled/postponed over the past two years.
- Other than the top Florida markets affected by Hurricane Ian, the Top 25 Markets held weekday occupancy indexes month over month, pointing to a strengthening in business travel. U.S. monthly demand exceeded the pre-pandemic comparable for the second time in the pandemic-era but first time this year.
- TRevPAR and GOPPAR reached the highest levels for any month since April 2018.
- San Francisco continues to lag all other Top 25 Markets in terms of GOPPAR and TrevPAR recovery, but overall, the major markets have stabilized with small improvements each month.
The demand index declined month over month, with contribution from most days of the week.
This should not be a cause for concern because:
- demand was still strong
- playing with percentages/indexes this small, it is extremely unlikely to see a perfectly linear recovery trend.
The post-Q1 “zigzag” is what to expect going forward, as calendar shifts, weather-related impacts, and segment normalization (business vs. leisure travel) all impact demand and comparables to 2019.