The global pandemic of 2020 put the hospitality industry on life support. But by 2024, the patient wasn’t just alive—it was running marathons.
Commercial real estate investors who bet on hospitality in the downturn are now seeing record-breaking RevPAR (Revenue Per Available Room). However, the hospitality landscape of 2026 is fundamentally different from 2019. The “heads in beds” model is dead. The “experiential stay” is the new currency.
Here are the key trends defining hospitality investment this year.
1. The Blended Traveler (Bleisure)
The line between “business trip” and “vacation” has dissolved. With remote work normalized, effective employees travel on Tuesday and stay through Sunday.
- Implication: Hotels need coworking lobbies, ergonomic in-room workspaces, and high-speed enterprise-grade Wi-Fi. Assets that offer these amenities command higher daily rates from digital nomads.
2. Luxury & Wellness Integration
Luxury is no longer about gold faucets. It is about wellness. High-net-worth travelers demand:
- In-room air purification systems.
- Circadian lighting.
- On-site recovery facilities (cold plunge, infrared sauna).
Developing hotels that integrate these health-centric features creates a competitive moat against standard flagged properties.
3. Technology as a Service Differentiator
Guests want a contactless experience until they need a human.
- Mobile Key: Check-in via app.
- Smart Room Controls: Temperature and lighting control via phone.
- AI Consierge: Immediate answers to “where is the gym?” without calling the front desk.
Investing in assets with updated tech stacks reduces operational labor costs (fewer front desk staff) while increasing guest satisfaction scores.
4. The Rise of “Select Service” Luxury
Full-service hotels (with 3 meals a day restaurants and room service) have massive labor costs. The new trend is “Select Service Luxury”—high-end rooms and design, but limited food & beverage operations (perhaps just a high-end bar and grab-and-go breakfast).
- Investor Benefit: Higher margins. You aren’t losing money on a restaurant that is empty at lunch.
Primior’s Hospitality Strategy
We focus on acquiring and developing hospitality assets in high-barrier Southern California markets. By targeting the “Bleisure” and Wellness segments, we position our properties to capture the highest-spending traveler demographic.
Hospitality is an operational business wrapped in a real estate asset. It requires active, expert management. Learn how Primior manages hospitality assets for maximum yield.









