No Vacancy Live! podcast

What the Global Hotel Pipeline Actually Says About 2026

0:00
14:24
Rewind 15 seconds
Fast Forward 15 seconds

Everyone keeps asking the same question: Is hotel development slowing down?
The global numbers say something very different โ€” and far more nuanced.

I checked in with Bruce Ford of Lodging Econometrics for a worldwide pipeline update that cuts through assumptions and looks at what's really happening across regions, segments, and timelines.

On #NoVacancyNews, Bruce explains why room counts remain historically high, why developers deliberately push openings into later years, and why renovations and conversions now matter as much as ground-up construction. This conversation focuses less on hype and more on how capital actually behaves when markets tighten.

A big thanks to Actabl โ€” Actabl gives you the power to profit. Visit Actabl.com.

What the data actually shows:

๐ŸŒ: Global pipeline remains massive โ€” but not evenly distributed
๐Ÿ—๏ธ: Projects already under construction tell a different story than announcements
๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ: China still dominates room count, but activity continues to normalize
๐Ÿจ: Luxury holds firm while other segments feel pressure
๐Ÿ”„: Renovations and conversions reshape supply faster than new builds
๐Ÿ“†: Developers delay openings by choice, not panic
๐ŸŽข: Orlando and Dallas attract momentum for very different reasons

More episodes from "No Vacancy Live!"