D.C. Hotels Have Slumped During Government Shutdown
Photo Credit: Lincoln Memorial. Original image from Carol M. Highsmith’s America, Library of Congress collection, in the public domain. The photo was before current construction externally to create an accessibility ramp. Library of Congress, Flickr / Creative Commons / Carol. M. Highsmith
Skift Take
The shutdown appears to be amplifying Washington’s tourism downturn, but underlying national softness in hotel demand makes it hard to isolate the damage.
A prolonged U.S. government shutdown has dealt another blow to Washington, D.C.’s hotel sector, already facing weak business travel and a National Guard deployment since August 11.
Hotel performance metrics from CoStar showed demand — measured by rooms sold — trending 4% to 6% below last year's levels.
Occupancy for hotels in the broad Washington, D.C. metro area progressively declined since the summer. It was down 3.9% in July; 5.2% in August; 5.8% in September; and 6.2% between October 1 and 25.
Occupancy Slides Sharply DowntownIt's been even worse in the city's central business district, where many high-end hotels are located: Occupancy