September Hotel Rates, Occupancy Generally Rise Worldwide - Business Travel News

Share this page

Text size: A A A

September Hotel Rates, Occupancy Generally Rise Worldwide

October 26, 2010 - 01:05 PM ET

By Michael B. Baker

Hotel rate and occupancy increased year over year in most major markets around the globe in September, Smith Travel Research Global reported on Tuesday.

In Europe, hotel occupancy reached 74.8 percent occupancy, and revenue per available room hit its highest levels since September 2008, according to STR Global managing director Elizabeth Randall. Rates increased by 34.8 percent in Stockholm, 30 percent in Cologne, Germany, and 29.1 percent in Geneva, Switzerland. Rates were down, however, by 22.3 percent in Vienna, Austria, and 15.5 percent in Aberdeen, Scotland.

September rates increased by 11 percent year over year in the Asia/Pacific region which, coupled with a 7.4 percent increase in occupancy, boosted RevPAR by 19.2 percent there. The biggest rate increases were in Shanghai, up 34.2 percent, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, up 21.7 percent, and in New Delhi, India, up 20.2 percent.

All three metrics also increased in the Americas, albeit more modestly. Occupancy increased by 6.6 percent and average daily rate by 2.3 percent, adding up to a 9.1 percent increase in RevPAR. Rates were up across all markets except San Juan, Puerto Rico. Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo in Brazil had the highest increases, up 24.7 percent and 16.5 percent, respectively.

In the Middle East/Africa region, rates increased by 8.2 percent, occupancy by 58.2 percent and RevPAR by 14.2 percent. Rates increased the most in Johannesburg, South Africa, up 32.5 percent compared with September 2009. In Abu Dhabi, however, rates plummeted by 27.8 percent.

This page is protected by Copyright laws. Do Not Copy. Purchase Reprint

Leave your comment:

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus