- CoStar: U.S. hotel metrics rise week-over-week and year-over-year through March 7.
- Occupancy rose to 63 percent, up from 62.8 percent the prior week.
- Orlando posted the largest occupancy decline, down 6.4 percent to 76.2 percent.
U.S. HOTEL METRICS improved for the week ending March 7, with week-over-week and year-over-year gains, according to CoStar. Las Vegas reported the highest increases across the three key performance metrics.
Occupancy increased to 63 percent for the week ending March 7, up from 62.8 percent the prior week, reflecting 1.2 percent year-over-year growth. ADR rose to $166.47 from $159.03, marking a 3.6 percent year-over-year increase. RevPAR increased to $104.92 from $99.85, up 4.9 percent from the same week in 2025.
Among the top 25 markets, Las Vegas posted the largest year-over-year gains across key metrics: occupancy rose 19.1 percent to 85 percent, ADR rose 60 percent to $291.25 and RevPAR rose 90.5 percent to $247.61, driven by the triennial CONEXPO-CON/AGG.
San Diego saw the only other double-digit occupancy increase, up 12.5 percent to 73.5 percent, driving the second-highest RevPAR gain, up 20.7 percent to $153.11.
Compared with last year’s Mardi Gras period, New Orleans recorded the largest declines in ADR, down 12.8 percent to $196.89 and RevPAR, down 17.2 percent to $135.63.
Orlando recorded the largest occupancy drop, down 6.4 percent to 76.2 percent.



