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IHG Just Converted 1,800 European Rooms in One Signing. The Per-Key Economics Tell a Different Story.

IHG signed 11 former PentaHotels across Germany, Belgium, and France into Holiday Inn, voco, and Garner flags, with Castlelake and Goldman Sachs financing the ownership JV. The conversion math looks efficient until you decompose what the owners actually need these brands to deliver against a European travel market turning pessimistic.

IHG Just Converted 1,800 European Rooms in One Signing. The Per-Key Economics Tell a Different Story.
Available Analysis

1,800 rooms across 11 properties in three countries, converted from PentaHotels into IHG's Holiday Inn, voco, and Garner brands. The ownership JV (Ogilvy Management and Ironstone Group) secured financing from Castlelake and Goldman Sachs. Properties span Germany, Belgium, and France, with system entry expected first half of 2027. On paper, this is a clean portfolio play. Let's decompose it.

Start with the conversion arithmetic IHG is leaning on. In 2025, conversions accounted for 84% of IHG's European room openings and 61% of signings. That ratio tells you new-build economics in Europe are essentially broken for anything that isn't ultra-luxury or government-subsidized. Construction costs, land prices, and financing terms have made conversions the default growth vehicle. IHG isn't choosing conversions because they're strategic. They're choosing conversions because the alternative barely pencils.

The brand allocation is where I'd focus. Six properties go Holiday Inn (upper-midscale, known quantity). One goes voco (upscale conversion brand, more rate upside, more brand-standard friction). Four go Garner... IHG's midscale conversion brand making its Belgium debut. Garner is specifically designed for owners who want a flag without a gut renovation. That's a low-PIP, low-friction entry point, which is exactly what a JV backed by institutional capital wants: minimize conversion CapEx, maximize speed to system. The question is whether Garner's loyalty contribution in a market like Brussels justifies the franchise economics versus running independent with a strong OTA strategy. I haven't seen enough European Garner performance data to answer that, and neither has anyone else (the brand is too new). The owners are making a bet on IHG's commercial engine before the evidence exists.

The financing structure matters more than the flag. Castlelake and Goldman Sachs aren't providing capital because they love Holiday Inn Brussels. They're providing capital because the basis is attractive on a per-key level for established European urban and airport locations, and the IHG franchise reduces perceived operational risk for the lender's underwriting model. That's a financing arbitrage, not a brand conviction. If the JV partners extracted better debt terms by flagging with IHG than they would have as independents, the franchise fee is effectively a financing cost... and it should be evaluated as one.

Here's what keeps me up: European business travel sentiment flipped to net pessimism in April 2026 per GBTA data, with overall optimism dropping from 59% to 41% since January. Six of these 11 hotels are in German secondary cities and airport locations that depend heavily on corporate demand. The owners are converting into a loyalty system at exactly the moment the demand segment that loyalty systems serve best is contracting. The conversion will take 12-18 months to complete. If European corporate travel hasn't recovered by mid-2027, these properties enter the IHG system needing to prove loyalty contribution in a market that's traveling less. The math works in the base case. Check again on what "works" means if occupancy comes in 400-600 basis points below plan.

Operator's Take

Here's what I want every operator involved in a European conversion to internalize. Conversions are cheaper and faster than new builds... that's not strategy, that's arithmetic. The strategy question is whether the loyalty contribution covers the total brand cost in YOUR market, in THIS demand environment, not in the proforma your franchise sales team presented. If you're an owner being pitched a conversion deal right now, ask for actual loyalty contribution data from comparable European properties already in system... not projections, actuals. If the brand can't or won't provide that, you're underwriting hope. And run your downside scenario against a 15-20% corporate demand softening, because the GBTA numbers say that's not hypothetical anymore. The best time to stress-test is before you sign.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: IHG
🌍 Belgium 🏢 Castlelake 📊 Conversion CapEx 🌍 France 📊 Franchise economics 🌍 Germany 🏢 Goldman Sachs 🏢 Ironstone Group 📊 Loyalty Programs 🏢 Ogilvy Management 📊 European conversion economics 🌍 European hotel market 📊 Garner 📊 Holiday Inn 🏢 IHG
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.