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hotel.info Q3 Hotel Price Index reveals: Hotel rates in the UK are astonishingly stable. Situation varies in British cities. Still too early to sound the all clear in Europe and rest of the world.



UK: : - Average room rates only fell relatively slightly
- Birmingham and Liverpool harder hit
- London still has the UK's most expensive hotels
Europe: - Rate falls continue, some significant
- Moscow reports the highest fall, London the lowest
Worldwide: - : In some cities, room rates have risen slightly
- Beijing, Dubai and Bangkok suffer greatest falls
- New York records significant rise in room rates and ousts Moscow as the most expensive place to stay in the world


London, 20 October 2009 - Whilst the media have been reporting on a global fall in hotel room rates over the past few months of economic crisis, rates in the UK have actually remained surprisingly stable, even though they are still marginally down on the previous year. In Europe and the rest of the world as a whole, it is still too early to sound the all-clear, although the downward trend has obviously slowed somewhat in the third quarter, and some cities have even been able to record slight increases.

These are the findings of the hotel price index, calculated by the online hotel reservation service hotel.info for Q3 2009. The online hotel booking agent reached its conclusions after evaluating hotel rate requests for the third quarters of 2008 and 2009, as well as for Q2 2009. Warini Munshi, Managing Director of hotel.info hotel booking Ltd, explains the background, "We wanted to view the changes in rates during the third quarter in a direct comparison with the corresponding period last year - a period that had not yet been affected by the rate distortions triggered by the economic crisis. However, we also wanted to ascertain the rate trends for 2009, and to understand whether hotel rates had perhaps started to return to normal as the year progressed."

The results are based on the average hotel rate per night and room for all categories of hotel and room.

United Kingdom

Hotel room rates in the UK fell only slightly from the second to the third quarter of 2009 - down by just -1.01%. The year-on-year comparison revealed a decrease of -2.75%. This proves that UK hotel rates have been astonishingly stable compared with the rest of the world. In Q3 the average cost of spending the night in a UK hotel was £93.42. The rates of 2, 3 and 4 star hotel rooms recovered in July, August and September in comparison with the second quarter of 2009, but were still lower than they had been in Q3 2008. In contrast to 1 star hotels, which actually recorded a rise between Q3 2008 and Q3 2009 (+1.32%), 5 star hotel chains recorded a fall in rates over the same period of -4.97%.

The hotel room rate trend differed greatly across different UK cities. Whilst hotels especially in Liverpool and Birmingham recorded massive rate falls between Q2 and Q3 2009 (-17.99% and -16.04% respectively), those in Glasgow and Edinburgh (+23.20% and +22.82% respectively) bucked the crisis-induced trend, presumably due to a strong summer tourist season. With an average nightly rate of £113.47, London retains its position as having the UK's most expensive hotels, followed by Edinburgh (£100.65). The average stay during Q3 2009 was 2.4 nights, which actually represented a slight year-on-year increase (Q3 2008: 2.38).

Europe

In most European countries hotel operators continued to suffer during the summer months from rate falls, which in some cases were significant. Cities that appear to have been particularly overvalued include Moscow (-17.04%), Helsinki (-16.41%) and Warsaw (-12.13%), all of which suffered again from Q2 to Q3 2009 following massive drops in the year-on-year comparison. Whilst the -13.42% drop in Madrid, the capital of crisis-wracked Spain, was unsurprising, the Catalan capital of Barcelona fared significantly better, with a fall of just -1.72%. Even though the UK appears have been even more badly hit by the economic crisis, this has not caused London rates to fall drastically. On the contrary, with average rates falling from €125.44 (£114.89) in Q3 2008 to €123.80 (£113.47) in Q3 2009, the UK capital recorded the smallest drop in rates of any European city. Only Berlin, Lisbon and Budapest were able to "keep up" with relatively moderate falls of between -3 and -6%. The hotels in these cities have also been those that have been the first to record a positive trend from the second to the third quarters of 2009.

Moscow (€149.32), Oslo (€132.52) and Copenhagen (€127.66) remained Europe's most expensive cities for hotel rooms in the third quarter. As usual Zurich, Amsterdam, Stockholm, London and Helsinki were not far behind. Berlin (€82.58), Prague (€62.94), Budapest (€77.91) and Lisbon (€80.18) are revealed as having the best-priced hotels in Europe.

Worldwide

In a global analysis the fall in hotel room rates has slowed in the third quarter. While major cities such as Beijing (-38.83%), Dubai (-28.52)% and Bangkok (-24.36%) had to cope with the largest drops between Q3 2008 and Q3 2009, rates have fallen since Q2 2009 by "only" single-digit percentages, with the exception of the Australian metropolis of Sydney, whose hotels seem to be experiencing a delayed reaction to the global economic crisis and have recorded further massive falls between the second and third quarters of 2009 (-20.28%). In contrast, New York's hotel room rates have risen markedly again since the beginning of July, increasing by +7.22%. The most stable city during the economic crisis in terms of hotel room rates has proven to be Brazil's Rio de Janeiro, where hotel room rates actually climbed between Q3 2008 and Q3 2009 from €93.27 to €96.60.

With an average room rate of €151.33 in Q3, New York has ousted Moscow (€149.32) from its position as the world's most expensive place to get a room. Oslo (€132.52), Copenhagen (€127.66) and Zurich (€124.67) were also within the top five.



Top 10 most expensive hotel cities in the world

Average
room rates
Q3 2009
1. New York 151,33
2. Moscow 149,32
3. Oslo 132,52
4. Copenhagen 127,66
5. Zurich 124,67
6. London 123,80
7. Tokyo 118,09
8. Stockholm113,06
9. Dubai 112,26
10. Singapore 107,85


Major UK cities:

Average room
rates Q3 2009
in GBP
Average room
rates Q3 2008
in GBP
Change in % from
Q3 2008 to Q3 2009
Average room
rates Q2 2009
in GBP
Change in % from
Q2 to Q3 2009
1. London 113.47114.89 -1.24 114.58 -0.97
2. Edinburgh  100.65 97.03 3.73 81.95 22.82
3. Bristol 89.18 84.76 5.21 83.63 6.64
4. Glasgow 85.83 80.58 6.52 69.61 23.30
5. Cardiff 77.57 80.41-3.53 82.84 -6.36
6. Birmingham 73.54 75.17 -2.17 87.59-16.04
7. Manchester 72.97 77.10 -5.36 77.30 -5.60
8. Liverpool 70.01 85.20 -17.83 85.37 -17.99
9. Plymouth 69.00 82.71 -16.58 64.646.75
10. Coventry 68.44 73.86 -7.34 70.71-3.21
 
UK93.4296.06 -2.7594.37 -1.01
1 star hotels 52.20 51.52 1.32 48.926.70
2 star hotels 67.52 71.52-5.59 68.01 -0.72
3 star hotels 77.50 82.01 -5.50 77.32 0.23
4 star hotels 105.67 112.65 -6.20 105.66 0.01
5 star hotels 157.41165.64 -4.97 168.21 -6.42


Euro/sterling conversion based on exchange rate as at 12/10/2009

Average room
rates Q3 2009
Average room
rates Q3 2008
Change in %
from Q3 2008
to Q3 2009
Average room
rates Q2 2009
Change in %
from Q2
to Q3 2009
Selected European cities

1. Moscow 149,32 206,92 -27,84180,00 -17,04
2. Oslo 132,52 148,24 -10,60 139,29 -4,86
3. Copenhagen 127,66 152,33 -16,20 133,74 -4,55
4. Zurich 124,67 136,83 -8,89 130,51 -4,47
5. London 123,80 125,44 -1,31 122,74 0,86
6.Stockholm 113,06 126,30 -10,48 122,98 -8,07
7. Paris108,21 117,96 -8,27 115,15 -6,03
8. Amsterdam 107,72 130,78-17,63 109,44 -1,57
9. Helsinki 105,61 120,54 -12,39 126,34 -16,41
10. Rome 96,47 106,13 -9,10 106,39 -9,32
11. Barcelona 94,98 112,57 -15,63 96,64 -1,72
12. Vienna 85,25 92,96 -8,29 85,66 -0,48
13. Berlin82,58 87,49 -5,61 82,19 0,47
14. Lisbon 80,18 83,01 -3,41 79,74 0,55
15. Bucharest 77,97 98,22 -20,62 89,86 -13,23
16. Budapest 77,91 82,60 -5,68 76,77 1,48
17. Madrid 76,84 92,43 -16,87 88,75 -13,42
18. Istanbul 75,36 89,68 -15,97 79,94 -5,73
19. Warsaw 73,33 98,99 -25,92 83,45 -12,13
20. Prague 62,94 76,00 -17,18 71,40 -11,85


Selected world cities

Average room
rates Q3 2009
Average room
rates Q3 2008
Change in %
from Q3 2008
to Q3 2009
Average room
rates Q2 2009
Change in %
from Q2
to Q3 2009
1. New York 151,33 193,06 -21,62 141,14 7,22
2. Tokyo 118,09 136,29 -13,35 123,83 -4,64
3. Dubai 112,26 157,05 -28,52 122,54 -8,39
4. Singapore 107,85 129,41 -16,66 110,66 -2,54
5. Sydney 105,22 116,24-9,48 131,99 -20,28
6. Rio de Janeiro96,6093,27 3,57 100,64 -4,01
7. Mexico City 87,81 92,56 -5,13 94,24 -6,82
8. Shanghai 70,88 82,38 -13,96 76,57 -7,43
9. Beijing 68,41 111,84 -38,83 70,25 -2,62
10. Bangkok 58,17 76,90 -24,36 62,77 -7,33


hotel.info

www.hotel.info is a free online hotel reservation service for corporate and private customers. The service offers more than 210,000 hotels for electronic bookings around the world. Customers booking via hotel.info achieve significantly better prices in comparison with other booking channels. In addition, hotel.info shows all available room prices for each hotel, so that the customer can always select the cheapest or most suitable room price. All bookings via hotel.info are transferred simultaneously, securely and directly to the respective hotel’s computer. This guarantees the unique integration of each hotel’s own reservation systems (CRS or PMS) and hotel.info’s own reservation system myRES into the hotel.info unified user interface.

At hotel.info, customers seeking hotel rooms can base their decisions to book a room not only on the core information such as room price and hotel facilities, but also on the hotel reviews and ratings submitted by around 1 million hotel guests from around the world. Compared with existing rating portals, hotel.info customers can rely on 100% genuine hotel ratings, since only customers who have booked and recently stayed in each hotel are asked for their opinion. Once a customer has selected an offer, the hotel is presented for direct online booking at attractive conditions, in line with the hotel.info "Check & Book" claim. hotel.info is the international brand of hotel.de AG. This brand was created to further drive expansion within Europe. The aim is to establish hotel.info throughout Europe as the leading reservation service for corporate and private customers. Today hotel.info operates offices in Germany, France, Spain, Italy and China.

_____________________________________________________


Ms. Warini Munshi
hotel.info hotel booking Ltd.
Longcroft House,
2-8 Victoria Avenue London,
EC2M 4NS United Kingdom
Phone:+44-(0)20-32061430
Fax: +44-(0)20-80431108
E-Mail: press@hotel.info
URL: www.hotel.info
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