- Occupancy rose to 62.8 percent for the last week of February, CoStar reported.
- NYC posted the largest occupancy drop, down 12.6 percent to 65.8 percent.
- San Francisco recorded the largest gains across all three key metrics.
U.S. HOTEL PERFORMANCE remained mixed for the last week of February, with occupancy up slightly, ADR and RevPAR down, and year-over-year metrics falling, according to CoStar. New York City reported the largest occupancy drop, down 12.6 percent to 65.8 percent.
Occupancy slightly increased to 62.8 percent for the week ending Feb. 28, from 62.2 percent the prior week and unchanged year over year. ADR fell to $159.03 from $164.56, down 0.2 percent year over year. RevPAR declined to $99.85 from $102.35, down 0.2 percent from the same week in 2025.
Among the top 25 markets, New Orleans reported the largest declines in ADR, down 32.6 percent to $160.58 and RevPAR, down 33.7 percent to $100.14 versus Mardi Gras 2025.
Las Vegas posted the second-largest declines in all three key metrics: occupancy fell 12 percent to 72.1 percent, ADR 26.9 percent to $171.18 and RevPAR 35.7 percent to $123.45.
San Francisco posted the largest gains in all three key metrics: occupancy up 20.3 percent to 75.3 percent, ADR 12.5 percent to $232.83 and RevPAR 35.3 percent to $175.33.



