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CoStar: U.S. hotel metrics slide in final week of May

St. Louis posted the largest occupancy gain, up 11.1 percent to 64.5 percent

U.S. hotel occupancy and RevPAR decline, with St. Louis showing growth

Occupancy fell to 61 percent, down from 67.5 percent the previous week, according to CoStar. ADR declined to $151.48 from $164.57 and RevPAR decreased to $92.45 from $111.02.

What were the U.S. hotel occupancy trends in late May 2025?

U.S. HOTEL METRICS declined for the week ending May 31, marking weekly and yearly lows, according to CoStar. St. Louis led the top 25 markets in year-over-year occupancy growth.

Occupancy fell to 61 percent for the week ending May 31, down from 67.5 percent the previous week and 1.6 percentage points lower year over year. ADR declined to $151.48 from $164.57, a 0.3 percent drop from the same week in 2024. RevPAR decreased to $92.45 from $111.02, down 1.9 percent year over year.


Among the top 25 markets, St. Louis posted the largest occupancy increase, up 11.1 percent to 64.5 percent. New York and Los Angeles recorded the largest ADR gains, up 5.7 percent to $290.35 and $189.06, respectively.

The steepest RevPAR declines were in New Orleans, down 30.2 percent to $73.59, and Dallas, down 21.5 percent to $67.25.


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Yom Kippur Calendar Shift Lifts U.S. Hotel Metrics | CoStar

CoStar: Yom Kippur shift boosts hotel metrics

Summary:

  • U.S. hotel occupancy rose to 69.1 percent, up from 63.7 percent weekly, CoStar reported.
  • San Francisco led in year-over-year occupancy and RevPAR gains.
  • New York City posted the largest ADR increase.

U.S. HOTEL METRICS rose for the week ending Oct. 11, though occupancy remained below last year’s level, according to CoStar. The week’s latter half was boosted by the Yom Kippur calendar shift.

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