Today · Jun 17, 2026
Portland Marriott Waterfront Sells for $30M. Someone Paid $82.7M in 2013.

Portland Marriott Waterfront Sells for $30M. Someone Paid $82.7M in 2013.

A 506-key downtown Portland Marriott just traded at $59 per key. That number tells you everything about what's happening in distressed urban hotel markets right now... and what the buyer is betting on.

$30 million for a 506-key full-service Marriott on the waterfront in Portland. That's $59,288 per key. The previous owner paid $82.7 million in 2013 and refinanced with a $71 million loan in 2018. They stopped making payments in February 2024. The loss here is total. Not partial. Total.

Let's decompose this. A $71 million loan on a property that just sold for $30 million means the lender ate roughly $41 million (before fees, carrying costs, receivership expenses). The equity from the 2013 acquisition... gone. Every dollar. The per-key price implies the buyer is underwriting this at something close to a 10-12% cap rate on current NOI, or (more likely) they're pricing off a recovery scenario where Portland's upper upscale segment climbs back toward pre-pandemic RevPAR. That segment is still down over 22% from 2019 levels. Occupancy has dropped 11 points. The buyer, linked to a New York-based opportunistic fund that has acquired 68 hotel properties, is not buying today's cash flow. They're buying optionality on a city that might recover in 3-5 years. "Might" is doing a lot of work in that sentence.

The Portland context makes this worse. Downtown office vacancy hit 34.6% in late 2025. Retail vacancy: 32%. The 20 largest office buildings in Portland collectively lost nearly 70% of their market value since 2019. Leisure and hospitality employment in the county is still 15% below pre-pandemic. This isn't a hotel problem. This is a city problem. A 506-key convention-oriented Marriott needs group business, corporate transient, and a functioning downtown to generate the NOI its capital structure requires. Portland is delivering none of those at pre-pandemic levels.

I audited a distressed hotel sale once where the new buyer's pro forma assumed a 40% NOI increase within 36 months. When I asked what operational changes justified that assumption, the answer was "market recovery." That's not underwriting. That's a prayer with a spreadsheet attached. The buyer here may have a more sophisticated thesis (their fund has done $24 billion in gross real estate acquisitions), but the fundamental question remains: what specifically changes in downtown Portland that turns a $30 million basis into a profitable hold? The Marriott management agreement is long-term, which means fees are fixed regardless of whether the asset earns its cost of capital. The new owner is paying Marriott either way.

The real number for anyone watching distressed hotel transactions: 63.8% value destruction in 13 years on a branded, full-service, waterfront asset in a top-40 market. That's the data point. If you're an asset manager holding upper upscale hotels in challenged urban cores (and you know which cities I'm talking about), this comp just reset your downside scenario. Check again.

Operator's Take

Here's what I'd tell you if we were talking. If you're an owner or asset manager sitting on a full-service hotel in a downtown market that hasn't recovered... Portland, San Francisco, a handful of others... stop using 2019 comps for your hold analysis. They're fiction now. Run your downside off current trailing NOI, not the recovery you're hoping for. And if your debt service coverage is getting tight, have the conversation with your lender NOW, not after you've missed a payment. The guy who owned this Portland asset waited. It cost him everything.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: Marriott
Portland Marriott Waterfront Sold at $59,500 Per Key. Let That Number Sink In.

Portland Marriott Waterfront Sold at $59,500 Per Key. Let That Number Sink In.

A 506-room downtown Marriott just traded at a 63% discount to its 2013 purchase price, with occupancy barely clearing 23%. The per-key price tells a story about Portland, about convention hotels, and about what happens when debt and reality stop agreeing.

$30.1 million for a 506-room full-service Marriott on the waterfront. That's $59,500 per key. The previous owners paid $82.7 million in 2013 and refinanced with a $71 million loan in 2018. They stopped making payments in February 2024 with $68.1 million in principal outstanding and roughly $800,000 in unpaid interest. The property went into receivership. It just closed at 36 cents on the 2013 dollar.

Let's decompose this. At $59,500 per key, the buyers (a New York alternative asset manager and an LA real estate firm, operating through a joint acquisition entity) are pricing this asset at roughly replacement cost for a select-service hotel. This is a full-service, 40,000-square-foot-convention-space waterfront property. The implied cap rate on trailing NOI at 23.5% occupancy is almost meaningless to calculate... the property isn't generating stabilized income. This isn't a yield play. This is a basis play. The buyers are betting they can hold at a cost basis so low that virtually any recovery scenario produces an acceptable return. Meanwhile, the previous equity is gone. Completely. The lender took a haircut of roughly $38 million on a $68 million balance (and that's before carrying costs and receivership fees). Someone at that lending desk is having a very specific kind of quarter.

The receiver's report noted the hotel "exceeded budget expectations" by hitting 23.5% occupancy against a 22.4% projection. I want to be precise about what that means. Beating a catastrophic projection by 110 basis points is not a recovery story. It's a slightly less terrible version of terrible. Portland hotel revenue in 2023 was still down nearly 38% from 2018 levels. Downtown convention demand hasn't come back, and a 506-room box needs group business to function. At 23.5% occupancy, this hotel is running roughly 119 occupied rooms per night. The fixed cost structure on a property this size... engineering, security, minimum staffing, franchise fees, property taxes... doesn't care that 387 rooms are empty. Those costs show up every month regardless.

The deal structure is textbook distressed acquisition. Joint venture between an asset manager with scale and a regional operator with execution capability. Marriott stays on as operator under the existing management agreement (which tells you Marriott's fee stream, even at these occupancy levels, is worth preserving... or the management agreement is simply too expensive to buy out at this basis). The buyers inherit a clean capital stack. No legacy debt. No deferred maintenance obligations from a previous owner who stopped investing when they stopped paying. They can underwrite a renovation, reposition the convention offering, and wait for Portland's downtown to recover... or not recover, in which case $59,500 per key gives them a land-value floor that limits downside.

I've analyzed enough distressed hotel acquisitions to know the pattern. The first owner builds or buys at cycle peak. The lender underwrites peak assumptions. The market corrects. The debt becomes unserviceable. The second owner buys at the bottom with clean basis and patient capital. The question is always the same: does the market come back, and how long can you afford to wait? At $59,500 per key with no legacy debt, these buyers can afford to wait a long time. The previous owners, who paid $82.7 million and then layered on $71 million in debt, could not. Same asset. Two completely different stories depending on when you bought and what you owe.

Operator's Take

If you're an asset manager or owner holding a full-service downtown hotel with pre-pandemic debt levels and post-pandemic demand... this is your benchmark, and it's brutal. Portland just told you what the market will actually pay for a 500-key convention hotel doing 23% occupancy. Don't wait for the recovery to "almost be here" before you stress-test your capital stack. Run your numbers against a 30% RevPAR decline from today's levels and see if your debt service still works. If it doesn't, you need to be talking to your lender now, not when you're 90 days delinquent. I've seen this movie before. The owners who survive are the ones who restructure before the receivership paperwork starts.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: Marriott
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