Holiday Inn's "New Playbook" Is the Same Old Song With Better Staging
IHG is dressing up Holiday Inn's refresh as a strategic revolution, but when you strip away the lobby renderings and the press-friendly language, the real question is whether owners will see returns that justify the capital... or just another round of brand theater with a nicer font.
So IHG had a monster 2025. Record openings, 443 hotels, over 65,000 rooms added, operating profits up 15% to $1.2 billion, and a shiny new $950 million share buyback announced for 2026. The pipeline is 340,000 rooms deep. The fee margin expanded 360 basis points. If you're an IHG shareholder, you're having a wonderful year. If you're an IHG franchise owner staring down a property improvement plan tied to this "new playbook"... your year is about to get more complicated. And more expensive. And nobody at headquarters is going to sit across the table from you when the math doesn't work.
Let's talk about what this "playbook" actually is when you peel the press release off it. IHG has been pushing hard on conversions... roughly 60% of their openings and 40% of organic signings were conversions in early 2025. That tells you something important about the growth strategy: they're not building new hotels, they're rebadging existing ones. Which means they need a product model that's conversion-friendly, cost-efficient, and visually compelling enough to justify the flag change. Enter Holiday Inn Express 5.0, the "Dawn" model, with its emphasis on "space design, service details, and smart experiences." (That last phrase, "smart experiences," is doing a LOT of heavy lifting and I'd love for someone to define it in a sentence that an actual front desk agent could execute.) The per-room construction cost target of roughly $20,000 is a China-specific number, by the way. If you're an owner in Memphis or Boise expecting that figure to translate, I'd encourage you to sit down first.
Here's the part that makes my filing cabinet twitch. IHG's Americas RevPAR was up just 0.3% for the full year and actually declined 2% in Q4 2025... underperforming both Hilton and Marriott. So the domestic engine is cooling. And into that cooling environment, IHG is asking owners to invest capital in a refreshed product standard while simultaneously pushing conversion-heavy growth that dilutes the existing system's pricing power. You know what that looks like from the owner's chair? It looks like you're spending money to maintain a brand premium that's shrinking. I sat in a franchise review once where the brand rep kept talking about "the halo effect of system growth" and the owner next to me leaned over and whispered, "The halo is costing me $4,200 a month in fees and I can't tell you what it's doing for my rate." That owner wasn't wrong. And there are a lot of owners feeling exactly that way right now.
The FIFA World Cup narrative is interesting... IHG's CEO is publicly citing it as a 2026 demand catalyst, and he's probably right that select markets will see a lift. But "the World Cup will help" is not a brand strategy. It's a weather event. What happens in 2027 when the tournament is over and your PIP payments are still due? The Deliverable Test on this refresh is the same one I apply to every brand evolution: can the team at a 140-key Holiday Inn Express in a secondary market, staffed the way hotels are actually staffed right now (which is to say, thinly), deliver whatever "elevated experience" this playbook promises? Because if the answer requires a dedicated team member, a specialized amenity, or a technology integration that assumes broadband speeds your 1990s-era building can't support... you don't have a playbook. You have a fantasy document with a timeline attached.
I want to be clear... I'm not anti-IHG, and I'm not anti-refresh. Holiday Inn is one of the most recognized names in hospitality and it SHOULD evolve. But evolution that primarily serves the franchisor's fee margin (up 360 basis points, remember?) while the franchisee's RevPAR in the Americas barely moved? That's not a partnership. That's a subscription. And owners need to read the actual FDD, compare the projected loyalty contribution to what properties in their comp set are actually receiving, and make the decision with their calculator, not with the brand's slide deck. The slide deck always looks beautiful. The P&L is where the truth lives.
If you're a Holiday Inn or HI Express franchisee getting the call about this refresh... before you agree to anything, pull your actual loyalty contribution numbers for the last 24 months and compare them to what was projected when you signed. Then ask your franchise rep to show you the same comparison for properties in your comp set. If they can't or won't provide it, that tells you everything you need to know. The shiny new playbook means nothing if the math underneath it hasn't changed. Get the math first. Decide second.