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CoStar: U.S. hotel metrics hit lows

San Francisco led top 25 markets in all key metrics

U.S. hotel occupancy and revenue decline week ending August 9, 2025

Occupancy declined to 68 percent for the week ending Aug. 9 from 69.5 percent the previous week, according to CoStar. ADR fell to $159.61 from $161 and RevPAR dropped to $108.47 from $111.90.

Summary:

  • U.S. hotel metrics fell for the week ending Aug. 9, hitting weekly and yearly lows.
  • Occupancy dropped to 68 percent from 69.5 percent the previous week.
  • Houston saw the sharpest decline, with occupancy down 27.5 percent to 55.3 percent.

U.S. HOTEL METRICS declined for the week ending Aug. 9, marking weekly and yearly lows, according to CoStar. San Francisco continued to lead top 25 markets in all three key performance metrics.


Occupancy declined to 68 percent for the week ending Aug. 9, from 69.5 percent the previous week and 1 percentage point lower year over year. ADR fell to $159.61 from $161, down 0.6 percent from the same week in 2024. RevPAR dropped to $108.47 from $111.90, down 1.6 percent year over year.

Among the top 25 markets, San Francisco recorded the highest year-over-year gains in all key performance metrics: occupancy rose 12.8 percent to 81.5 percent, ADR increased 8.3 percent to $210.29, and RevPAR climbed 22.2 percent to $171.38. The market’s performance was helped by the World Transplant Congress.

Houston recorded the steepest drop in occupancy, down 27.5 percent to 55.3 percent, and RevPAR, down 34.6 percent to $61.38. The decreases were due to elevated displacement demand following Hurricane Beryl in 2024.

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U.S. hotel performance September 2025

CoStar: Hotel metrics fall to weekly, yearly lows

Summary:

  • U.S. hotel metrics hit weekly and yearly lows for the last week of September, CoStar reports.
  • Las Vegas posted the largest year-over-year declines across key metrics.
  • Occupancy fell in 21 of the top 25 markets.

U.S. HOTEL METRICS declined for the week ending Sept. 27, hitting weekly and yearly lows, according to CoStar. Overall, 21 of the top 25 markets saw a drop in occupancy.

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