Primary Navigation - link to other main sections from here

Skip Navigation

Press Office

11th March 2008 Acrobat (pdf, 166 KB)

The Hotel Price Index 2008

A review of global hotel prices in 2007

Introduction

Hotels.com's Hotel Price Index (HPI) is a regular survey of hotel prices in major destinations across the world. The HPI is compiled from data obtained by Hotels.com, the hotels expert and the world's most visited online hotel booking site. *

Hotels.com's international scale (in terms of both customers and destinations) makes it one of the most comprehensive benchmarks available, as it incorporates both chain and independent hotels.

In Europe, approximately 25% of hotel rooms are part of a chain, the remainder being independent. The reverse is true of the US, where approximately 70% of hotel rooms booked are in chains.

In addition to the standard survey, the HPI includes occasional features on new or unusual booking and pricing trends.

* Hotels.com website is the most visited in the 'Hotels/Accommodation provider' category, according to comScore Media Metrix (January - December 2007).

In this issue

In the HPI, we focus on two main points of data for the period:

  • Actual prices paid for hotel rooms in 2007:
    • Included prices are given for all bookings at all destinations, as well as being broken out for specific destinations (regional, national and major cities). The overall average prices quoted include all bookings across all star ratings.
  • Year-on-year comparisons between prices paid in 2007 and prices paid in 2006. This removes the effect of seasonality and shows underlying price trends for destinations:
    • It should be recognised that there may be some 'hidden' seasonal effects in year-on-year comparisons, such as a major change in booking patterns as a result of local factors (such as a festival, conference or event).

1. Global price changes

Average hotel rates were generally flat for the world as a whole in 2007. However, while the global picture was generally flat, this overall trend masks substantial changes across the world's major markets - as prices in Europe and Asia rose, while prices in the US and Rest of the World (RoW) baskets fell.

During 2007, the HPI rose from 112 in December 2006 to between 118 and 120 for the period of January to May 2007.

The fluctuation during the year reflected northern hemisphere travellers' desire to travel off-peak. The spring and late-summer price peaks reflect the fact that many independent travellers are now avoiding the summer months and would prefer to spend more on city-breaks travelling off-peak.

European prices up in 2007

US: don't be fooled by New York, there are bargains to be found

Asia prices fall back

2. Top global city destinations

Major European destinations saw substantial price rises in 2007,

In 2007, there was a growing divide between higher-priced cities such as Moscow, Venice and London - which have seen year-on-year rises, on top of already higher-than-average prices.

While traditionally strong city-break destinations including London, New York, Barcelona, Paris and Venice saw average prices rise in 2007, many European cities - such as Pisa, Tallinn, Frankfurt, Budapest and Prague - saw falls.

Overall cheapest destinations

Overall most expensive destinations

European destinations

3. Major European country destinations

UK tops list of most expensive destinations, showing highest price rises

4. Focus on UK and Ireland

Bath remains most expensive UK city - though London edges up

Scotland

Ireland

5. What the average traveller pays

Hotels.com has looked at what different nationalities spend on their hotel rooms. This Hotel Price Index special feature examines the average prices paid for rooms by travellers overall - both when they are staying in their home nation and when visiting overseas cities.

It also looks at the prices that different travellers pay on average in the major European city destinations - as well as the average paid in New York, a perennial favourite city-break for all European travellers.

6. The price of luxury

There has been a marked increase in the numbers of travellers willing to spend at the top-end of the hotel market, according to the latest Hotels.com Hotel Price Index.

7. How far £100 will get you around the world

For those who want to stay in the lap of luxury while on their breaks should choose carefully when it comes to picking a destination.

Spending just £50 each per night for a couple can buy a five star pad in the best-value cities around the world (that include exotic locations such as Bali, Buenos Aires or Sao Paolo, as well as destinations closer to home such as Cairo, Lisbon or Marrakech).

In other destinations, the same amount will only stretch to a two star in Moscow or Tokyo and just one-and-a-half stars in New York.

Hotels.com has compiled the ultimate guide to the cities where luxury comes cheap - and where £50 each can buy a night of indulgence.

About the HPI

The data behind the HPI comes from Hotels.com's proprietary database.

The HPI is primarily a survey of consumer prices paid for hotel rooms and is focused on the independent traveller. Corporate rates may vary and are not included in the survey.

Hotels.com's international scale (in terms of both customers and destinations) makes it one of the most comprehensive benchmarks available, incorporating chain and independent hotels.

Prices and growth shown in the survey are not adjusted for inflation. The data is based on actual prices paid for bed-night stays at prices set by the hoteliers in the relevant period.

We have allowed for currency exchange fluctuations over the year by converting all the hotel prices to their original currency, using published daily exchange rates. Therefore, the hotel prices and changes shown are the actual prices paid by customers at the time of booking.

For further information

For more information/press enquiries or spokespeople, please contact: Alison Couper, Hotels.com, +44 (0)20 7019 2360 and acouper@hotels.com or James Gordon-MacIntosh, Seventy Seven PR, +44 (0)20 7492 0902 and james.gordon-macintosh@77pr.co.uk

About Hotels.com

Hotels.com website is the most visited in the 'Hotels/Accommodation provider' category, according to comScore Media Metrix (Dec-Jan 2007).

Operating in all major markets with dedicated staff, www.hotels.com offers more than 80,000 quality hotels worldwide, and promises a price guarantee in 40,000 of these properties: if a customer can find the same deal for less, Hotels.com will match it. www.hotels.com also has one of the largest independent hotel teams in the industry, meaning that users get an honest review of the properties. Travellers can book online or by contacting one of our multi-lingual call centres on +44 (0)20 7492 0979

For further information visit www.hotels.com or call +44 (0)20 7492 0979

Download printable version (pdf, 166 KB)

Share

Javascript must be enabled the social bookmarklet links to work correctly.

Partners
Expedia Hotels(fr) Hotels(dk) Hotels(de) Hotels(fi) Hotels(ie) Hotels(se) Hotels(es) Hotels(uk) Hotels(no) Hotels(nl) Hotels(us) Hotels(it) Tripadvisor

© 2002-2008 Hotels.com L.P. All rights reserved.
Hotels, hotels.com logo and bellman are trademarks and or service marks of Hotels.com L.P., a subsidiary of Hotels.com.