HENDERSONVILLE, Tennessee—Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. hotel industry showed continued lower performance during May 2020, according to data from STR.

In a year-over-year comparison with May 2019, the industry recorded the following:

  • Occupancy: -51.7% to 33.1%
  • Average daily rate (ADR): -39.9% to US$79.57
  • Revenue per available room (RevPAR): -71.0% to US$26.35

The absolute occupancy and RevPAR levels were the lowest for any May on record in the U.S., but all three key performance metrics were up from April levels. Recent weekly data shows occupancy above 40% due to a slow and steady rise in demand.

Among the Top 25 Markets, Oahu Island, Hawaii, experienced the steepest drop in occupancy (-84.2% to 13.1%), which resulted in the largest decrease in RevPAR (-90.4% to US$17.85).

Boston, Massachusetts, experienced the steepest decline in ADR (-60.4% to US$89.72).

All of STR’s COVID-19 analysis can be found here.

A note to editors: All references to STR data and analysis should cite “STR” as the source. Please refrain from citing “STR, Inc.” “Smith Travel Research” or “STR Global” in sourcing.

Additional Performance Data
STR’s world-leading hotel performance sample comprises 68,000 hotels and 9.1 million hotel rooms around the globe. Please refer to the contacts listed below for additional data requests.