The final U.S. hotel performance forecast of 2025 is in – and it’s not the news many hoped for. According to the latest from CoStar and Tourism Economics, both 2025 and 2026 projections have again been downgraded across occupancy, ADR, and RevPAR, signaling a tougher environment ahead.
For 2025, RevPAR has been lowered to -0.4% – marking the first annual decline in U.S. RevPAR since 2020. Projections for 2026 follow a similar trend, with all three metrics nudged downward.
“We expect little change in the macroeconomic environment as unemployment and prices continue to rise,” said Amanda Hite, STR President. “ADR is growing well below the rate of inflation, which in turn will put more pressure on margins.”
“Job market softening, policy uncertainty, and tariff costs remain near-term drags for consumers,” added Aran Ryan, director of industry studies with Tourism Economics.
Together, their comments paint a picture of slow growth, margin pressure, and an uneven recovery – a signal to hoteliers that forecasting for 2026 will require more nuance than ever before.
These latest revisions reinforce what many operators have already felt this year: a K-shaped recovery and a bifurcation of the market. Luxury and upper-upscale hotels continue to perform strongly, fueled by affluent travelers and resilient high-end corporate demand. Meanwhile, select-service and midscale properties are seeing softer booking patterns as middle-income guests wrestle with higher living costs and uncertainty about the broader economy.
This divergence has become the defining characteristic of the post-pandemic hotel cycle. Inflation, tariff concerns, and labor costs continue to pressure the middle of the market, while the top tier holds steady. The “average” recovery story no longer exists – it’s two very different stories unfolding at once.
Digging deeper than chain scales, we know that hospitality has always been a street-corner business. Conditions at one hotel might look nothing like those a few blocks or a few brands away. That’s why it's important to pay attention to the broader trends but more importantly focus on market and property-specific insight.
With the 2026 forecast showing tighter margins and slower growth, hoteliers should:
Of course, having all your data in one place allows operators to see trends faster, test assumptions, and plan scenarios with confidence.
The latest forecast downgrade doesn’t signal doom – it signals discipline. The market isn’t collapsing; it’s re-balancing. Some segments will thrive, others will tighten, and the difference between success and struggle will hinge on how well you understand your own data, and how well you can drive greater efficiency in your business.
Hospitality has always been about local realities and quick decisions made close to the front desk. The same principle applies to forecasting and strategy today: know your business, know your guests, and use your data effectively to act faster than the market around you.
Because while the national numbers set the tone, your numbers tell the real story.