(CNN) — If there was any doubt whether travel-starved vacationers would stay in hotels after months of lockdown due to Covid-19, it should be gone now.
Data indicates that US hotels located in popular vacation destinations, many of which reopened in May and June, are booked for the summer season.
While nationwide hotel occupancy is nowhere near pre-pandemic levels, Carter Wilson, a senior vice president of consulting and analytics for the hotel research company STR, says that people are indeed checking into properties, especially ones close to beaches and national parks and on weekends.
“People are definitely eager to travel,” he says.
Luxury properties are in high-demand
Boutique hotel The Reeds at Shelter Haven on the New Jersey shore is doing brisk business this summer.
Courtesy The Reeds
Luxury hotels in summer getaway hotspots, like the Jersey Shore in New Jersey, are finding business is booming, and are at (albeit reduced) capacity for most, if not all, of the summer.
Managing director Ron Gorodesky says that the property’s suites have been fully occupied for the month of June and are fully booked in July and August as well.
“Despite the 60 percent occupancy cap we had on rooms, our hotel revenue in June matched or exceeded most June 2019 dates,” he says. “July 4th broke records, and we are on track to meet or exceed our projected room 2020 sales.”
Daniel A. Hostettler, president and group managing director of Ocean House Management
Owner George Filopoulos said that the Montauk property, a beachfront resort, and Gurney’s Star Island, home to the largest marina in the Hamptons, collectively lost 3,284 rooms in June from corporate retreats and weddings being canceled.
However, the resorts saw 2,500 more transient room bookings in June, compared with last year. “Rates are higher for individual bookings than groups so our total room revenues are the same as last year,” he says.
The Newport location, meanwhile, saw 1,400 new reservations over the first two weeks in June — almost quadruple compared with the same time last year.
Gurney’s Montauk beachfront resort has been packed this summer — despite Covid-19.
Courtesy Gurneys Resorts
Fancy hotel staycations
Evidence from other luxury properties also indicates a robust interest in summer leisure trips, even if they’re close to home and by travelers with more disposable income.
Ocean House, for one, opened on June 16 to 75 percent occupancy, but that number is now 100 percent, he says, with average daily rates at $1,561.
“It was like someone turned the faucet on. We went from getting 100 calls a day from potential guests a month ago to 900 in mid-June,” says Hostettler.
The newest addition to his company’s portfolio, a 3,500-acre property in Richmond, Rhode Island, called Preserve Sporting Club & Residences, is also seeing high demand and even getting multiple requests for buyouts.
Natural surroundings
Auberge Resorts Collection, with 19 properties, is, too, seeing occupancy rates close to 100 percent at The Lodge at Blue Sky near Park City, Utah, which reopened on June 1, and its two Napa Valley properties, which reopened on June 11.
The Lodge at Blue Sky outside of Park City, Utah, is an outdoor enthusiast’s dream locale.
Courtesy Auberge Resorts Collection
Demand is shaping up to be so high, particularly for pricey properties where room rates start in the four figures, that it can be hard to find space, save for an odd night here and there.
Camp Sakira by Amangiri opened in the Utah desert in July 2020.
Aman
Driving instead of flying
According to hotel research firm STR’s data, 14.3 million hotel rooms were sold in the United States for the week ending June 13 — half compared with the same period last year but nearly double the 7.2 million rooms sold for the week ending April 11.
“Drive markets are huge, and road trips are coming back strongly,” says STR’s Carter Wilson.
Rummy Pandit, the dean of hospitality management at Johnson & Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island, agrees. “Travelers may still be shying away from planes, but they are happy to jump into their cars and drive to stay at a beach resort or countryside property,” he says.
Pandit is right about people still not flying. According to the trade group Airlines for America, US airlines were transporting 2.5 million passengers a day prior to the health crisis.
As travel restrictions and stay-at-home orders were implemented, demand for air travel declined to its lowest point in April when it was down 96 percent. Currently air travel is down roughly 80 percent, after an uptick around the July 4 holiday weekend.
Scheduled flights, however, are increasing to beach destinations. For example, Hawaiian Airlines recently brought back a number of flights (which were drastically, if not entirely, reduced during the spring and early summer) from the mainland to most of the islands by August.
“Travel is by no means back yet, but we are encouraged to see people begin to travel as their communities reopen, and we all learn to navigate this new normal,” said Chip Rogers, president and CEO of the AHLA, in a release that reported the survey’s results.
Uptick in chain hotel bookings
Cypress Bend Resort, in far western Louisiana, is part of the BW Premier Collection by Best Western
Courtesy Best Western
“Beach, mountain and lake locations where travelers can maintain social distancing are particularly popular,” she says. “Destinations with the highest demand include Panama City, the Tennessee mountains and suburban Chicago.”
From the second week of June, however, that changed: today, some areas of the country are running similar occupancies as this time last year.
Numbers are strongest in the southern part of the country in areas such as Texas, Florida and South Carolina, she says, and slower in New England and the Midwest. Whether this trend continues as cases continue to rise in Texas and Florida remains to be seen.