LONDON – London received global attention during the Queen's Diamond Jubilee as the city hosted festivities over four days in the beginning of June for hundreds of thousands well-wishers, who lined up along the Thames River or along the streets between St Paul's Cathedral and Buckingham Palace. For hoteliers it meant hosting visitors from around the world and the country. Hotels in London saw occupancy reach 90.5 percent on Saturday night (2 June) and benefited from the extended weekend to boost the traditionally low Sunday night with occupancy reaching 79.3 percent (+20.8 percent) according to STR Global, the leading provider of market data to the hotel industry.

"The Jubilee weekend has been a fantastic opportunity for London to once again showcase its heritage and pageantry and to be under the spotlight as a destination capable of handling large scale events", said Elizabeth Randall, managing director at STR Global. "Across all hotel segments, performance increased during Saturday and Sunday, as the festivities came to their climax. However due to the public holidays during Monday and Tuesday (4-5 June), the missing business and meeting travelers impacted the weekday performances".

Diamond Jubilee Weekend RevPAR change [%]

Source: STR Global

Looking at revenue-per-available-room performance by class across London, Sunday night saw the biggest RevPAR growth. The Economy class saw the largest RevPAR growth (+54.6) Sunday night compared to the previous year, led by an increase in average daily rate of 52.3 percent to £64.52. The Upper Midscale class increased RevPAR by 30.9 percent on the same night, led by a 30.9 percent increase in occupancy to 80.0 percent.

Sunday night saw the biggest RevPAR improvements in three out of nine London markets. Wandsworth-Southbank-Tower Bridge, Outer London and The City/Shoreditch areas reported increases of 73.5 percent, 43.2 percent and 31.4 percent, respectively. The highest occupancy of the five-day period was achieved Saturday night (2 June) in an area south of the river between Wandsworth and Tower Bridge reporting 98.4 percent, as guests benefited from the closeness to the River Pageant on Sunday. The highest rate of the five-day period could be found, as it is tradionally, in the Knightsbridge/Pimlico/Victoria market with £227.48 on Friday night.

The rest of the week (4-9 June), on the other hand, was more challenging for hoteliers as the traditional corporate business was replaced by leisure visitors. London hotels saw the biggest drop Tuesday with occupancy declining by 38.9 percent to 57.6 percent, compared to the previous year.

London Hotel Performance change 1-5 June 2012

Source: STR Global

STR Global tracks more than 41,000 daily rooms around London across all segments.

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STR Global provides clients-including hotel operators, developers, financiers, analysts and suppliers to the hotel industry-access to hotel research with regular and custom reports covering Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia/Pacific and South America. STR Global provides a single source of global hotel data covering daily and monthly performance data, segmentation data, forecasts, annual profitability, pipeline and census information. Hotel operators can join the surveys on a complimentary basis and benefit from free industry data. STR Global is part of the STR family of companies and is proudly associated with STR, RRC Associates, STR Analytics and HotelNewsNow.com. For more information, please visit .

Jeff Higley (STR)
VP, Digital Media & Communications
+1 (615) 824-8664 ext. 3318
STR Global