Today · Apr 9, 2026
Your Hotel Lender Is About to Get a Lot More Interested in Your Phone Calls

Your Hotel Lender Is About to Get a Lot More Interested in Your Phone Calls

PNC just posted a quarter that has Wall Street drooling, and they're projecting a return to commercial real estate lending growth in 2026. If you've been sitting on a refi, a renovation, or a new deal, the window just cracked open... but it won't stay open forever.

I sat across from a banker once... mid-2023, maybe early 2024... trying to get a construction draw released on a property that was already 60% complete. The guy looked at me like I'd asked him to co-sign a timeshare. "We're just not doing hotel right now," he said. Not "we can't make the numbers work." Not "the deal structure needs adjustment." Just... not doing hotel. Full stop. That's been the lending environment for the better part of two years. Banks treating hospitality like it was radioactive.

So when PNC drops a quarter with $6.07 billion in revenue (beating estimates by $170 million), posts $4.88 EPS against a $4.23 consensus, and then tells the market they expect 8% loan growth and an 11% revenue increase in 2026... you should be paying attention. Not because PNC's stock price matters to you. It doesn't. What matters is what's underneath those numbers: a major commercial real estate lender signaling that the deep freeze is thawing. They're projecting CRE lending growth starting early this year. They just closed the FirstBank acquisition, which plants them deeper into Colorado and Arizona... two markets where hotel development has been stuck in neutral waiting for capital to show up. They're opening 50-60 new branches in 2026 and spending $700 million on AI and technology infrastructure. This is a bank that's leaning in, not pulling back.

Here's what nobody's telling you about why this matters right now. The spread between what banks want to lend at and what hotel deals can actually support has been brutal. Cap rates compressed during the pandemic recovery, construction costs stayed elevated, and interest rates made the math ugly on anything that wasn't a Class A asset in a top-10 market. But PNC is projecting their net interest margin above 3% in the back half of 2026, which means they're expecting to make money at rates that are actually serviceable for borrowers. M&T Bank is already talking about hotel lending "on a case-by-case basis." KeyCorp and First Horizon are making similar noises. When multiple regional banks start saying the same thing within the same quarter, that's not coincidence. That's a market turning.

But let me be direct about something. A thawing lending market doesn't mean easy money. If you're an owner or a developer who's been waiting for "rates to come down" before you move on that refi or that renovation... stop waiting for perfect. Perfect isn't coming. What IS coming is a six-to-twelve month window where banks are competing for deals again, where your existing lender relationship actually means something, and where the guy across the table from you isn't treating your hotel like a four-letter word. PNC alone is planning $700 million in quarterly share repurchases, which tells you they have capital to deploy and confidence to deploy it. That confidence flows downstream to their lending officers.

The question you should be asking isn't whether banks are lending on hotels again. They are. The question is whether YOUR deal is ready when your banker calls. Because they're going to call. I've seen this cycle three times now. The freeze. The thaw. The window. The scramble. We're entering the window phase. If your trailing 12 NOI is clean, your PIP is scoped and priced, and your market story makes sense... you're about to have a conversation you haven't been able to have in two years. If your financials are a mess and your deferred maintenance list is longer than your revenue forecast, this window closes on you before it ever really opens.

Operator's Take

If you're an owner sitting on a maturing loan or a deferred renovation, pick up the phone Monday morning and call your relationship banker. Not next month. Monday. Ask specifically about their 2026 CRE appetite for hospitality. If you're with a regional bank that's been dodging your calls, this is your moment to get a real answer... and if the answer is still no, start shopping. The lending market is about to get competitive again, and the owners who move first get the best terms. I've seen this movie before. The ones who wait for "better rates" end up refinancing at worse terms six months later because all the good capital got allocated to the people who showed up early.

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Source: Google News: Apple Hospitality REIT
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