The country’s hotel markets rallied last week following the ending of Auckland’s Covid-19 alert level 3 lockdown, according to figures from STR.
Hotel markets suffered sharp falls after Auckland went into its latest lockdown, according to figures from STR.
Auckland saw occupancy rebound last week from the city’s first Covid-19 alert level lockdown of the year, according to figures from STR.
Wellington appeared to bear the brunt of last week’s snap Auckland lowdown with occupancy at the capital dropping sharply, according to figures from STR.
Queenstown managed to crawl off its 2021 low last week, according to figures from STR.
Average weekly occupancy across most of the country’s hotel markets took a dip last week leading into the long Waitangi weekend, according to figures from STR.
Wellington has made a solid start to 2021 with average weekly occupancy jumping from 43% in mid-January to 55% by the end of the month, according to figures from STR.
Average weekly occupancy ticked up last week in the country’s major hotel markets, with growth led by Christchurch, according to figures from STR.
Auckland performed the best of the country’s major hotel markets over the Christmas and New Year’s break, according to figures from STR.
Overall average weekly occupancy across all of New Zealand has barely budged since the recovery from Auckland’s second lockdown at the end of August, according to figures from STR.
Average weekly occupancy in Queenstown has slid to its lowest point since the recovery from Auckland’s second Covid-19 alert level lockdown, according to figures from STR.
Auckland enjoyed the best October in the Asia Pacific in terms of RevPAR, according to CBRE, and its results appeared to be holding up but there was still no sign of a summer bump for the city, according to figures from STR.
While most of the major hotel markets remained static or slid last week, Wellington appeared to steal a march on summer with average weekly occupancy jumping, according to figures from STR.
Hotel occupancy across all of New Zealand remains stubbornly consistent, hovering around 56% for the past two months, according to figures from STR.
An all too brief boost over the September/October school holidays has given way to a general slide for the hard-hit resort, according to figures from STR.
After a climb back to almost pre-Covid levels of occupancy by the end of September, Christchurch’s hotel market has been remarkably consistent over the past month, according to figures from STR.
Wellington’s hotels have climbed off their August low to be the country’s best performing market in terms of occupancy during October, according to figures from STR.
Auckland was the only major hotel market to buck falls in average weekly occupancy, albeit only just, according to figures from STR.
Queenstown occupancy led the country’s major hotel markets down last week, despite it still being the second half of the school holidays, according to figures from STR.
All of the country’s major hotel markets enjoyed a weekly increase in occupancy for the first week of the September school holidays, albeit only just for Auckland, according to figures from STR.
Wellington has seen a steady but consistent climb in occupancy since late August to report the highest average weekly rate last week, according to figures from STR.
While most of the country’s major hotel markets have seen a steady rise since Auckland came out of Covid-19 alert level 3 at the end of August, Christchurch has seen a significant increase in occupancy, according to figures from STR.
While most of the major hotel markets have gotten a decent lift out of Auckland’s move to Covid-19 alert level 2 with added restrictions on Sunday 30 August, the city itself has struggled by comparison, according to figures from STR.
Auckland’s move to Covid-19 alert level 2 on Sunday 30 August, with some added restrictions, saw an immediate effect on the country’s major hotel markets, according to figures from STR.
Christchurch bucked the national trend with a sharp jump in occupancy.
Queenstown appears to be suffering most from Auckland’s Covid-19 alert level 3 lockdown, according to figures from STR.
New Zealand’s major hotel markets all took a hit following Auckland’s move to Covid-19 alert level 3 and the rest of the country to level 2 on 12 August, according to figures from STR.
Auckland’s hotel market will again be hit hard by new Covid-19 alert level 3 restrictions after staging a recovery since the end of July, according to figures from STR.
Wellington’s hotel occupancy has plateaued following the July school holiday peak but at a higher level than any of the other major markets, according to figures from STR.
Christchurch’s hotel market has seen occupancy hover around 50% for the fourth week in a row, defying falls in other markets over the past two weeks, according to figures from STR.
Occupancy and RevPAR dipped across all of the country’s major hotel markets in the second week of the July school holidays, according to figures from STR.
The resort saw a sharp uptick in occupancy for the first week of the school holidays, almost doubling from the previous week’s results, according to figures from STR.
The Government’s growing managed isolation business appears to be driving Auckland’s hotel sector as the market closes in last winter’s pre-Covid results, according to figures from STR.
A steady, five-week rise in occupancy has seen New Zealand’s overall hotel market close in on 50% occupancy, according to figures from STR.
Christchurch’s hotel market has been given a boost – most probably because of the Government’s managed isolation contracts – with occupancy and RevPAR jumping significantly last week, according to figures from STR.
Queenstown’s hotel market appears to have flattened, according to figures from STR.
Occupancy in Auckland has enjoyed a post-Queen’s Birthday weekend boost closing in on 50%, according to figures from STR.
While Queenstown, Auckland and Wellington saw a Queen’s Birthday weekend boost in activity last week, Christchurch struggled to lift itself off the floor, according to figures from STR.
Wellington occupancy has continued its climb into double figures following the move to Covid-19 alert level 2 on 13 May, according to figures from STR.
Queenstown has seen occupancy and RevPAR climb off its recent record lows during the week ending Saturday 16 May, according to figures from STR.
Across all of New Zealand, occupancy fell to 26.2% for the week ended Saturday 9 May, down 64.5% on the same week last year, according to figures from STR.
For the third week in a row, Auckland occupancy has crept up from a low of 32% a month ago to 44.33% last week, according to figures from STR.
Wellington occupancy appears to have plateaued, falling to 8.6% last week, according to figures from STR.
New Zealand’s second main gateway, Christchurch, saw RevPAR fall to $10.62 last week, down 91.1% on the same period last year, according to figures from STR.
Arrivals forced into self-isolation and departing tourists appear to be propping up the Auckland market, albeit at an unnaturally low level, as the country neared the end of the third week of lockdown, according to figures from STR.
The New Zealand market, sustained now only by self-isolating arrivals and essential workers, saw occupancy fall to 28% for the week ending September, according to figures from STR.
Queenstown hotel occupancy has dropped to a level possibly unheard of before – 11.1% – down 86.5% compared to the same week last year, according to figures from STR.
Occupancy and RevPAR across the country fell by levels possibly never seen before at a national level following the Government’s closure of the border to non-residents, according to figures from STR.
Another tough week for the hotel industry with sharp falls across the country, according to figures from STR.
After a slightly surprising positive first half of February for Auckland, the city’s hotel market has suffered double-digit falls across all three metrics, according to figures from STR.