NASHVILLE—STR and Tourism Economics lowered their year-over-year growth projections in the revised 2023-24 U.S. hotel forecast just presented at the 15th Annual Hotel Data Conference.

For 2023, growth in revenue per available room (RevPAR) was lowered by 0.5 percentage points, due to a 0.6ppt downgrade in occupancy growth. While that RevPAR growth remains above the long-term historical average, most of the increase was frontloaded to the early portion of the year. For 2024, the RevPAR growth projection was also lowered 0.5ppts on a 0.5ppt downgrade in occupancy. Average daily rate (ADR) was upgraded 0.1ppts for 2023 but kept flat for 2024.

“We brought down our growth projections with the industry in a period of normalization,” said Amanda Hite, STR President. “Last quarter, demand underperformed projections in the luxury segment with travelers pulling back on their leisure spending or opting for overseas trips, as well as the midscale and economy portion of the market due to recessionary effects. There have been conflicting signs of economic slowdown and the impact on consumer sentiment, but hoteliers remain optimistic, especially those in the middle-to-higher end of the market. A lot of the normalization we have seen in the data supports that optimism with a steady uptick in business travel and continued improvement in the major markets. ADR growth rates have moderated as the impacts of inflation and record-breaking leisure travel have waned, but our forecasted growth rates are still skewed toward the upper-end hotels with a rate-focused performance strategy.”

“The economy has remained resilient, but the cumulative effects of past interest-rate hikes by the Federal Reserve and banks dialing back on lending will contribute to a mild recession later this year,” said Aran Ryan, director of industry studies at Tourism Economics. “The impact of this slowdown on lodging demand will be limited, as group and business travel activity rebuilds, international visitors return, and leisure travelers continue to find room in household budgets to prioritize travel.”

Like the previous version of the forecast, profit growth will be limited in 2023 with slight improvement expected for 2024.