Paris Olympics hotel prices are down 41% since last fall

    • Luxury hotels have been hit hard, even though they did not increase their prices to the same extent as three- and four-star properties.
    • Luxury hotels have been hit hard, even though they did not increase their prices to the same extent as three- and four-star properties. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Thu, Jul 25, 2024 · 12:08 PM

    PARIS hotel prices during the Olympics have fallen to almost half their peak rate, further underscoring that overzealous hoteliers may have misjudged the appetite for expensive rooms.

    Accommodations are now being listed for an average of 313 euros (S$456) a night between Jul 26 and Aug 11, down 41 per cent from the peak rate of 531 euros observed around 11 months before the Games, according to data from travel insights company Lighthouse.

    Rates are still well above the average of 175 euros during the same period last summer, but this drop indicates that visitors are little inclined to shell out exorbitant amounts even for a major event such as the Olympics, which were last held in the French capital 100 years ago.

    Hoteliers who have been best able to avoid lowering prices over the past year are likely those who opted for more reasonable increases in the first place. Laetitia Brandariz-Berrut, manager of the four-star Hotel Bedford and three-star Hotel de l’Arcade, both in the 8th arrondissement, said she was charging a premium of 20 to 25 per cent beyond her previously held maximum rates.

    “You can’t be too greedy and try to sell rooms at unrealistic prices,” Brandariz-Berrut said. “We kept our prices and took the gamble to not drop them.”

    Luxury hotels have been hit hard, even though they did not increase their prices to the same extent as three- and four-star properties. Demand for these spots collapsed before the Games, with occupancy rates as low as 15 per cent for some July dates. Industry experts say media reports on overloaded metro lines, tightened security perimeters and concerns about traffic in the city centre may have deterred visitors from booking or even prompted cancellations.

    Still, overall hotel occupancy is solid, standing at 78.2 per cent for the week of Jul 22 and 76.2 per cent for the week of Jul 29, compared with 51.4 per cent and 50.1 per cent for the corresponding weeks in 2023, data from tourism research company MKG Consulting show. Occupancy tapers off the week of Aug 5, to 48.3 per cent, on par with 44.8 per cent a year ago.

    “We are seeing a good dynamic,” MKG chief executive officer Vanguelis Panayotis said, adding that Olympics bookings will help make up for a lacklustre June and early July. “And the prices aren’t bad. We’re in a phase where the market is correcting itself.”

    With prices newly lowered and two weeks of Olympics events soon to kick off, there’s still time for occupancy levels to rise. Lighthouse data indicate that on-the-books occupancy for the Olympics is currently 74.7 per cent. At this point last year, 51.7 per cent of rooms had been booked for the same period in 2023, with last-minute reservations eventually bringing occupancy rates to 72.8 per cent. In other words: Hotels still have time to fill their rooms, and may even continue to do so after the opening ceremony. BLOOMBERG

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services