In Brief: Today’s hotel coverage points to shifting travel patterns and capital flows reshaping lodging strategy. Canadian travelers are continuing to redirect demand away from the U.S. toward domestic and overseas trips, while operators and investors are responding to longer-stay demand, mixed-use formats and redevelopment opportunities; at the same time, strong tourism growth in the Middle East and a sizable U.S. construction pipeline underscore ongoing expansion in key markets.

  • Statistics Canada reported that Canadian residents took 90.6 million trips within Canada in the second quarter of 2025, up 10.9% year over year, while domestic travel spending rose 13.5% to $20.3 billion – Image Credit Ocean Wahl   

Top Hotel Industry News – April 27, 2026

Canadian Travel to the U.S. Remains Under Pressure As Domestic and Overseas Trips Gain Ground

Despite persistent political and trade tensions affecting US-bound tourism from Canada, travelers are instead fuelling growth in domestic and overseas trips, with the number of Canadian return trips to the US dropping 25.4% in 2025, while domestic trips increased by 10.9% and overseas voyages rose by 7.1% over the same period. Read Full Story

Hotels Are Adapting to Longer Stays – and Apartment-Style Models Are Leading the Shift

The global hotel industry is witnessing a structural shift towards extended-stay and apartment-style hotels, buoyed by evolving travel behaviors, more predictable occupancy patterns and attracting investment for more stable cash flow. Read Full Story

Saudi Arabia Leads Middle East Tourism Surge in 2025, Outpacing Global Growth

In 2025, Saudi Arabia spearheaded the Middle East’s tourism growth, with the region’s travel and tourism sector expanding by 5.3%, outstripping the global average of 4.1%, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council. Read Full Story

U.S. Hotel Construction Pipeline Tops 6,000 Projects at Q1 2026 Close

The first quarter of 2026 closed with 6,020 hotel development projects comprising 705,825 rooms at various stages across the U.S., reflecting steady activity in the hospitality construction industry, according to Lodging Econometrics. Read Full Story

Former Cancun Beachfront Hotel with Over 650 Rooms Available for Redevelopment

A former hotel property in Cancun’s Zona Hotelera, featuring over 650 rooms and extensive amenities, is available for sale. The site offers opportunities for redevelopment into a hotel, apartments, or other commercial uses. Its beachfront location and proximity to major attractions may appeal to developers and investors looking for large-scale projects in a prominent tourist area. Read Full Story

The Ritz-Carlton Hotel & Residences, Houston, Receives Investment from Jumana Capital

Jumana Capital has made an investment in The Ritz-Carlton Hotel & Residences, Houston, a mixed-use project by Deiso Moss and Marriott International, which includes a full-service hotel and branded residences in Houston’s Uptown-Galleria district. Read Full Story

Industry Context

Current coverage points to a lodging market shaped by uneven cross-border demand, continued development activity, and investor interest in formats with more durable cash flow. Reduced Canadian travel to the U.S., alongside stronger domestic and overseas travel from Canada, signals potential pressure for U.S. operators reliant on that feeder market, while growth in Saudi Arabia and the wider Middle East highlights the importance of regional demand shifts in global allocation decisions.

At the property level, extended-stay and apartment-style models are gaining traction as operators respond to longer guest stays and investors seek steadier occupancy patterns, even as the U.S. pipeline remains above 6,000 projects and capital continues to target mixed-use and redevelopment opportunities in markets such as Houston and Cancun.

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