At the close of the third quarter, the hotel construction pipeline in the Middle East region stands at 320 projects/87,149 rooms.
Projects scheduled to start construction in the next 12 months are at 87 projects/21,713 rooms, up 12% and 16% respectively, year-over-year (YOY). Projects in the early planning stage are at 128 projects/26,035 rooms. These data are according to the Q3 2022 Middle East Construction Pipeline Trend Report from Lodging Econometrics (LE).
The Middle East has the largest average room size for new construction projects in the pipeline of any region in the world, with an average of 252 rooms per project. Seventy-two percent of its pipeline is concentrated in the three highest chain scales: luxury, upper upscale, and upscale, which typically boasts larger scale projects. Of note, Wynn Resorts will open a new hotel on the island of Ras Al Khaimah. The 1,000-room luxury resort is currently in early planning and will be the largest project the region has seen with 10 restaurants, lounges, a spa, a convention facility, retail venues, and possibly a gaming area.
Countries in the Middle East with the greatest number of projects in the construction pipeline are Saudi Arabia with 210 projects/57,912 rooms and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) with 114 projects/31,096 rooms. Egypt follows with record high project and room counts of 75 projects/16,784 rooms, Qatar with a record high of 67 projects/accounting for 15,110 rooms, and Oman with 29 projects/6,438 rooms. Continuing to top the construction pipeline in the U.A.E. is Dubai, with 79 projects/23,542 rooms.
Cities with the largest hotel construction pipelines are the Provincial region with 76 projects/15,298 rooms, Riyadh with 61 projects/12,430 rooms, Doha, Qatar with 55 projects/12,789 rooms, Jeddah with 42 projects/8,956 rooms, and Makkah with 31 projects/21,228 rooms. Four of the cities with the largest pipelines are in Saudi Arabia and have record highs for both pipeline projects and room counts.
The top hotel franchise companies in the Middle East’s hotel construction pipeline at the close of the third quarter are led by Hilton Worldwide with 96 projects/24,129 rooms and Marriott International with 79 projects/22,093 rooms. Accor follows with 79 projects/18,384 rooms, then InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) with 52 projects/12,353 rooms, and Emaar Hospitality Group with 20 projects/5,048 rooms.
The leading brands in the pipeline for these companies are Hilton’s DoubleTree, with 26 projects/5,891 rooms, and Hilton Hotel & Resort, with 20 projects/6,340 rooms; Marriott’s Courtyard, with 15 projects/3,385 rooms, and Residence Inn, with 7 projects/956 rooms; Accor’s Novotel brand, with 11 projects/2,867 rooms, and Movenpick, with 10 projects/2,545 rooms; IHG’s InterContinental brand, with 12 projects/3,120 rooms, and Holiday Inn, with 11 projects/2,769 rooms.
Through the third quarter of 2022, the Middle East opened 47 new hotels, accounting for 11,011 rooms. LE is forecasting 26 additional new hotel openings with 4,434 rooms by year-end. The LE forecast for new hotel openings expects 115 projects/28,776 rooms to open in 2023 and another 124 projects/30,169 rooms are forecasted to open in 2024.