Today · Jun 13, 2026
80% of World Cup Host City Hotels Are Booking Below Forecast. The Summer Isn't Coming to Save You.

80% of World Cup Host City Hotels Are Booking Below Forecast. The Summer Isn't Coming to Save You.

AHLA's new World Cup hotel outlook shows most host cities tracking well below projections, with Kansas City and Boston looking worst. If you built your summer revenue plan around FIFA's promises, it's time to rebuild it around what's actually happening.

I worked with a GM once who spent six months getting ready for a major sporting event. Staffed up. Pushed rate. Turned away a corporate block for the week because he was sure the event demand would blow it away. The event came. Occupancy hit maybe 70%. He spent the rest of the quarter trying to claw back the business he'd turned away. His exact words to me afterward: "I planned for the brochure. I should have planned for the building."

That's what's happening right now in 11 U.S. cities that were told the World Cup was going to be the biggest demand event of the decade.

AHLA just dropped its FIFA World Cup 2026 Hotel Outlook, and the numbers are sobering. Eighty percent of surveyed hoteliers in host cities say bookings are tracking below their original forecasts. Not slightly below. Meaningfully below. Kansas City is reporting 85-90% of hotels under expectations. Boston, Philly, San Francisco, Seattle... nearly 80% below, with some operators calling the tournament a "non-event." The bright spots are Miami (about 55% ahead of forecast) and Atlanta (roughly 50% on track or better), but those markets were going to have a strong summer anyway. The World Cup isn't making their summer. It's riding along with it.

Here's what happened. FIFA overcommitted room blocks. Roughly half the hoteliers in the survey reported material block releases... which means FIFA reserved rooms, the demand didn't show up, and those rooms got dumped back into inventory too late for the hotel to resell them at full value. Meanwhile, 65-70% of hoteliers cite visa barriers and geopolitical friction as the reason international demand hasn't materialized. FIFA projected a 50/50 split between domestic and international visitors. That was always optimistic. Right now, domestic travelers are significantly outpacing internationals, and domestic fans don't book the same way. They drive. They stay with family. They use Airbnb. They don't fill 500-key convention hotels at $400 a night.

And about those rates... some markets have already pushed rates up 25-75% year over year. That's the rate recovery trap in full effect, except in reverse. Hotels priced for a demand wave that isn't cresting. In a normal compression event, high rates work because the demand justifies them. Here, you've got inflated rates sitting on top of soft demand, which is the worst combination in revenue management. You're not going to fill at $400 what should have been priced at $250, and every night that room sits empty at $400 is a night you'll never get back. The calendar doesn't care about your forecast.

The deeper problem isn't even the World Cup itself. It's what operators did based on the projection. If you hired ahead of it, you're carrying labor cost into a demand window that may not justify it. If you blocked inventory and turned away group business, that revenue is gone. If you committed to F&B enhancements or temporary staffing premiums based on FIFA's $30.5 billion economic output projection... well, Oxford Economics is now calling this a "temporary, sector-specific boost with minimal lasting economic impact." Which is economist-speak for "don't bet the house." FIFA's projections were a brochure. Your P&L is the building. And the building is what you have to live in after July.

Operator's Take

If you're a GM or revenue manager in a host city, stop waiting for the demand to show up and start managing what you actually have. First... if you're still holding inflated rates on open dates inside the tournament window, run a realistic pickup pace analysis today against your pre-World Cup baseline, not against the forecast you built six months ago. This is what I call the Rate Recovery Trap, except you're living the front end of it... you push rate beyond what the market will absorb, rooms go empty, and then you're cutting rate in a panic two weeks before the event. Cut strategically now while you still have time to capture something. Second, if you turned away group business for the tournament period, get on the phone with those contacts this week. Some of that business is still looking for a home. Third... and this is for every GM in every host city... get ahead of this with your ownership. Don't wait for them to read the headline. Walk in with your revised forecast, your adjusted staffing plan, and your strategy for the shoulder weeks around the tournament. The operator who brings the plan before the owner brings the question is the one who keeps the trust.

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Source: Google News: AHLA
NYC Is Squeezing Hotels From Every Direction. The Math Is Getting Brutal.

NYC Is Squeezing Hotels From Every Direction. The Math Is Getting Brutal.

New York City wants to raise property taxes nearly 10% on an industry already drowning in regulatory costs, union labor at $40 an hour, and operating expenses growing four times faster than revenue. At some point, the math stops working... and we're getting close.

I sat in a budget meeting once with an owner who had three hotels in a major Northeast market. He pulled out a napkin (yes, a napkin) and started listing every line item that had gone up in the past 18 months. Insurance. Labor. Property taxes. Compliance costs from a new city ordinance. When he ran out of room on the napkin, he flipped it over. When he ran out of room on the back, he looked at me and said, "Mike, at what point am I just collecting money for the government and paying my staff, and there's nothing left for me?" I didn't have a good answer. I still don't.

That's where New York City hotel owners are right now. The mayor wants a 9.5% bump to real property taxes. The city council is eyeing corporate tax increases. This is on top of the Safe Hotels Act that passed in 2024, which mandates continuous front desk staffing, panic buttons for housekeeping, and prohibits subcontracting housekeeping and front desk at properties over 100 keys. Layer on unionized room attendants earning roughly $40 an hour (that's $23 more than non-union, for anyone keeping score), insurance costs that jumped nearly 22% in one cycle, and operating costs that have been climbing four times faster than revenue growth over the past five years. Revenue growth this year? Projected at under 1% nationally. So you've got expenses on a rocket and revenue on a bicycle. The AHLA just testified to the city council about this, and they weren't wrong to sound the alarm... but I'm not sure anyone in that chamber was listening.

Here's the thing nobody wants to say out loud. New York hotels are generating massive economic value. Each room night produces an estimated $1,168 in visitor spending. The industry supports 264,000 jobs... roughly 5% of the city's workforce. It's projected to throw off $4.9 billion in tax revenue in 2026. And the city's response to all of that economic horsepower is to pile on more cost. It's like owning a racehorse and then strapping sandbags to the saddle before the Kentucky Derby. The AHLA specifically cited San Francisco as a cautionary tale, a city where the hotel industry entered what they called a "doom loop"... rising taxes, unrealistic regulation, business closures, declining tax base, which led to more taxes on whoever was left. That's not hypothetical. That happened. And the parallels are close enough to make you uncomfortable.

What makes NYC uniquely painful is the stack effect. It's not one thing. It's everything at once. The Airbnb crackdown (Local Law 18) wiped out nearly 80% of short-term rental listings, which theoretically should have been a gift to hotels... more demand, less alternative supply. And it did push occupancy to 81.7% and average rates to $388 a night, both strong numbers. But the cost to capture that revenue has exploded. The migrant shelter program absorbed hotel inventory at $185 per room per night (try running a hotel when the city is your biggest customer and also your biggest regulator). International travel to the city dropped 5% last year, and those are the $4,000-per-trip visitors you really need. So you've got record rates, near-record occupancy, and owners who are STILL struggling with margins. That should tell you everything about where the cost structure has gone.

The industry has lost 20,000 rooms since 2019. Let that number sit for a second. Twenty thousand rooms gone from one of the most in-demand hotel markets on the planet. That's not a market correction. That's a signal. When owners start selling or converting out of hospitality in Manhattan, the economics have broken. And the proposed response from the city isn't to fix the economics... it's to extract more from whoever hasn't left yet. At some point, and I think we're closer than most people realize, the calculation for a NYC hotel owner becomes: sell to a residential developer, convert to another use, or just absorb the slow bleed until the asset value drops enough that someone else's problem starts. None of those outcomes generate the tax revenue or the jobs that the city says it wants to protect.

Operator's Take

If you're an owner or asset manager with NYC hotel exposure, pull your five-year tax and regulatory cost trend right now and model forward with a 9.5% property tax increase. Then stress-test your hold decision against a disposition or conversion scenario. This is what I call the Invisible P&L... the regulatory compliance costs, the mandated staffing floors, the insurance spikes that never show up in the brand's pro forma but absolutely destroy your actual return. For GMs on the ground, document everything. Every incremental hour of labor driven by the Safe Hotels Act, every insurance renewal, every compliance cost. Your owners are going to need that data when they sit down with their accountants this quarter, and "costs went up" isn't specific enough. Give them the number. To the dollar.

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Source: Google News: AHLA
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