The Hawaii Hotel Performance Report Chart for June 2021 for hotels in Maui County. Chart courtesy of HTA

The strong recovery of Maui County’s hotels continues, with occupancy rising to 79.2 percent in June 2021, only 1.4 percentage points less than in June 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic brought the abrupt shutdown led most of the Hawaiian tourism industry.

Maui County’s hotel revenue per available room (RevPAR) also rose to $ 394 in June 2021, up 24.1% from June 2019, according to the Hawaiʻi Hotel Performance recently published by the Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority Report emerges.

And the Maui County hotel’s average daily rate (ADR) for June 2021 improved to $ 498, also 26.3% higher than two years earlier.

For Maui’s luxury resort region of Wailea, the RevPAR for June 2021 was USD 595 (+ 5.9% compared to June 2019), with ADR at USD 790 (+ 28.0% compared to June 2019) and an occupancy rate of 75.3 percent ( -15.7 percentage points compared to June 2019). June 2019).

The Lahaina / Kaanapali / Kapalua region had a RevPAR of 357 US dollars (+ 32.3% vs. June 2019), ADR of 437 US dollars (+ 31.6% vs. June 2019) and an occupancy rate of 81, 7 percent (+0.4 percentage points vs. June 2019).

THE ARTICLE CONTINUES UNDER THE AD

Hotels in Hawaii reported higher RevPAR and ADR for June 2021 compared to June 2019, with occupancy for June 2021 slightly below the June 2019 level.

THE ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW THE ADVERT

The nationwide RevPAR in June 2021 was $ 247 (+ 4.8% versus June 2019), an ADR of $ 320 (+ 14.2% versus June 2019) and an occupancy rate of 77% (-6.9 percentage points) .

“It is a positive sign that hotel accommodations are growing across the country, knowing how many local workers and families are benefiting from the return of the domestic market,” said John De Fries, President and CEO of the Hawai Hai Tourism Authority. “Although RevPAR and hotel occupancy did not come close to pre-pandemic levels in the first six months, it is encouraging to see the steady comeback of jobs and opportunities for Kama’aina that weren’t there a year ago . “

The report’s results were based on data from STR, Inc. that recorded 138 properties with 44,614 rooms, or 82.6 percent of all properties and 85.2 percent of operated properties with 20 or more rooms, in the Hawaiian Islands, including, as of June 2021 Full service, surveyed, limited service and condominiums. Vacation rentals and timeshare properties were not included in this survey.

THE ARTICLE WILL CONTINUE UNDER THE AD

In June 2021, most passengers arriving from another state and traveling between counties could bypass the state’s mandatory 10-day self-quarantine with a valid negative COVID-19 NAAT test result from a trusted test partner before leaving for Hawaii the Safe Travels program. Additionally, people who were fully vaccinated in Hawaii could bypass the quarantine order starting June 15. The travel restrictions between the counties were also lifted on June 15.

For the first six months of 2021, Hawaii hotel performance across the state continued to be impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Hotels in Hawaii earned $ 141 in RevPAR (-37.3% from 2019), with ADR of $ 293 (+ 4.8% from 2019) and an occupancy rate of 48.1 percent (-32.3 percentage points from 2019).

National hotel revenue in the first half of 2021 was $ 1.3 billion (-41% from 2019). The number of rooms was 9.2 million overnight stays (-5.9% vs. 2019) and the room demand was 4.4 million overnight stays (-43.7% vs. 2019).

Compared to the top US markets in the first half of 2021, the Hawaiian Islands had the second highest RevPAR behind Miami, FL at $ 155.

With the U.S. mainland open for road trips and short-haul intercontinental flights, the Hawaiian Islands occupancy was lower in the first six months of 2021 than many destinations in STR’s top 25 markets; Landing in 17th place.

To view the full report, click here.