City
Epaper

Indian hospitality sector’s revenue per available room to grow by 8-9 pc in FY25

By IANS | Updated: September 27, 2024 18:50 IST

New Delhi, Sep 27 The Indian hospitality sector is witnessing a boom and in FY25, the industry's revenue ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 27 The Indian hospitality sector is witnessing a boom and in FY25, the industry's revenue per available room is estimated to grow by approximately 8-9 per cent, a report showed on Friday.

According to rating agency CareEdge, the industry's revenue per available room registered a strong growth of 14 per cent during fiscal 2024.

For FY25, it is expected to grow by 8-9 per cent, building on the high base set in FY24.

CareEdge expects industry to report average revenue per available room growth to Rs 5,200-Rs 5,400 on a high base of FY24 and followed by a 5-6 per cent rise even in FY26.

India currently has around 166,000 branded hotel rooms/keys. Over the next five years, the industry is expected to add approximately 55,000 rooms, with supply registering a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.5-5.5 per cent during this period.

The hospitality sector is currently experiencing an upcycle, driven by favourable demographics, robust domestic demand (with supply clearly lagging behind demand growth), increased investments, and ongoing improvements in infrastructure and connectivity.

“On the back of the surge in domestic consumption and underlying GDP growth, the players in the industry are witnessing strong capacity utilisation,” said Ravleen Sethi, Director CareEdge Ratings.

With the current travel momentum to continue and anticipated demand likely to outpace current supply over the medium term and FY25 is likely to witness higher revenue per available room which would aid in overall improvement of credit profile of the players in the industry, Sethi added.

The segment mix is shifting towards upper midscale and midscale economy, with more than 60 per cent of new supply expected to be added in these segments.

This growth is driven by several factors, including a growing middle class, a significant uptick in business travel (especially from small and medium-sized enterprises, and an expanding scope of business activities into tier 2, 3 and 4 cities.

According to the report, more than 70 per cent of the proposed new supply is concentrated in tier 2 and 3 cities, followed by tier 1, as hotel owners and operators explore opportunities to capture unmet demand in emerging and underserved markets.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"We have a Communist coming": White House ahead of Trump-Mamdani meet

InternationalEarthquake of magnitude 5.2 jolts Pakistan

BusinessDubai Air Show 2025: "India is a strategic priority for us," says SAIC CGO

InternationalOver 10,000 Afghan refugees return from Pakistan, Iran in single day

InternationalTorrential rains trigger flooding, landslides in Vietnam, 41 dead

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia's scheduled commercial banks' GNPA improve 2.1 pc in Q2FY26: Report

TechnologyIITF 2025: Artisans, exhibitors hail govt support amid record footfall

TechnologyGovt launches Centre of Logistics Training Excellence in Hyderabad to boost tech‑led logistics skilling

TechnologyGoogle announces anti-scam tools, AI safety efforts for kids, elderly users in India

TechnologyNHAI to launch Raajmarg Infra Investment Managers to drive public InvIT Initiative