As tourism has started in full swing in the nation, Indian hotels are on a growth path as Mumbai continue to be the market leader, a new report said. Mumbai hotels recorded an occupancy rate of 80 per cent in May 2022, which was followed by Pune and Bengaluru, consulting firm HVS Anarock said in its 'Hotels & Hospitality Overview' report.
In May, the average daily rate of hotels ranged at Rs 5,750-5,950, which was 6-8 per cent higher than the corresponding month in 2019, the report said. It added that the average occupancy was 63-65 per cent, which is 1-3 percentage points over 2019, Mint reported.
The report stated that revenue per available room ranged between Rs 3,622-3,867, which is 10-12 per cent higher than in May 2019. The revenue metric is used to measure a hotel's performance.
While hotel industry has seen an upsurge in recent months even as the rise in travel costs has yet not impacted the demand, HVS Anarock said that the sector's growth may be hampered due to ongoing economic and global headwinds.
In May, domestic air traffic increased by over 11 per cent against April, almost touching the May 2019 level.
Hotels in Goa and Kolkata witnessed an increase of 8-12 per cent in May 2022 over against the 2019 levels, the report said, adding that Mumbai, New Delhi, Kochi and Bengaluru grew at 4-8 per cent.
“We were mapping the month of May and it has been much better than May 2019. We are ahead on all parameters like occupancies, average room rates and revenue per available room. This is obviously due to the strength of domestic travel. International business has not yet come back and so it can only get better from here. The strength of domestic tourism is something that has been very well recognized by the industry," said Mandeep S Lamba, HVS Anarock president, Mint quoted.
Hotel industry can breach 70 per cent occupancy mark by 2024, which would be the highest in the last 20 years, Lamba said. He said that business travel is picking up even in cities such as Bengaluru that had a slow start as the IT market has yet to bounce back, Mint quoted.
“We’re seeing signs of business travel recovery and we will see almost full robust business travel again by the last quarter of this calendar year," Lamba added.
To read the full story, Subscribe Now at just Rs 249 a month