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News

Tariffs and Immigration Fears Drive Decline in U.S. Hotel Bookings, 2025

Tariffs and immigration fears have reduced U.S. hotel occupancy and RevPAR in 2025, with international arrivals down sharply. Gateway and border markets face weaker pipelines, shorter booking windows, and higher costs; operators are shifting strategies and monitoring policy and major events for recovery.

Last updated: October 27, 2025 9:24 am
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Key takeaways
Hotel occupancy fell 2.3 percentage points in March 2025 versus March 2024, signaling weaker demand.
RevPAR dropped over 4% in March 2025 and is forecast to slip 0.1% for all of 2025.
International visits to the U.S. fell 11.6% in March 2025; 2025 inbound visits projected to decline 8.7%.

Tariffs and immigration fears are weighing on U.S. hotel bookings in 2025, pushing down international arrivals, occupancy, and room revenue in major gateway cities and border regions. Industry data show a broad pullback: hotel occupancy fell by 2.3 percentage points in March 2025 compared with a year earlier, while revenue per available room (RevPAR) dropped by more than 4%. Tourism forecasters now expect RevPAR to slip 0.1% for the full year, with national occupancy easing to 62.5%, as inbound travel weakens and price‑sensitive visitors stay away.

Downturn in international demand and economic impact

Tariffs and Immigration Fears Drive Decline in U.S. Hotel Bookings, 2025
Tariffs and Immigration Fears Drive Decline in U.S. Hotel Bookings, 2025

International demand—often the highest‑spending segment—has cooled quickly. International visits to the United States 🇺🇸 fell 11.6% in March year‑over‑year, with Tourism Economics projecting an 8.7% decline for 2025.

This downturn carries a heavy price:

  • The group estimates $8.5 billion less in international visitor spending this year.
  • The World Travel & Tourism Council estimates a potential loss of $12.5 billion.

Hotels that depend on overseas guests—New York City, Miami, and Los Angeles—report softer pipelines, muted group interest, and more short‑notice cancellations of meetings.

Regional source‑market declines

A chill is evident across North American source markets.

  • Canada 🇨🇦, the largest feeder market, is expected to reduce outbound trips to the U.S. by more than 20%, potentially removing $9 billion in tourism revenue in 2025.
  • Mexican travelers show similar patterns, especially near land borders, with sharper drops in weekend leisure stays and cross‑border shopping trips.

Border regions most affected include: Detroit–Windsor, San Diego–Tijuana, and the Rio Grande Valley, where operators describe thinner pickup and lower visibility into summer and fall.

Changing booking behavior

Booking behavior is shifting toward shorter lead times and greater flexibility, which complicates operations.

💡 Tip
Target near-term source markets with fewer visa frictions and be ready to adjust campaigns quickly as demand shifts, focusing on regions showing steadier travel interest.
  • About 40% of transient business bookings are now made within four days of arrival, a sharp rise in last‑minute reservations.
  • Major brands (Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt) and short‑term rental platforms have trimmed 2025 revenue targets due to:
    • Weaker international search interest
    • Softer group leads
    • Rising trip costs

These trends create challenges for staffing, pricing, and food‑and‑beverage planning.

What’s driving the pullback

Industry analysts point to a combined hit from higher costs and policy uncertainty.

  • New tariffs, including measures enacted in May 2025, are raising prices on imported construction materials, electronics, and furnishings—items central to hotel renovations and daily operations.
    • Result: capital projects delayed, replacement costs higher, and many properties nudging rates upward to protect margins.
  • Immigration fears are dampening demand from leisure and business travelers.
    • Headlines about stricter enforcement, high‑profile operations, and tougher entry screening are affecting traveler sentiment.
    • Several countries—Canada, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, China, the Philippines, and Hong Kong—have issued advisories mentioning safety, immigration checks, and civil liberties.
    • The return and expansion of travel bans under President Trump (covering 12 countries with partial limits on seven more) have reduced inbound flows by constraining visas and discouraging long‑haul planning.

The policy backdrop is fluid and affects financing and investment decisions:

  • Hotel owners report longer approval cycles from lenders and more conservative underwriting when a property relies heavily on international travelers.
  • Although cap rates have not shifted dramatically, investors press operators on exposure to overseas mix, event calendars, and airline capacity into gateway airports.

Markets under the most pressure

The pain is concentrated in U.S. gateways and resort markets with historically high shares of foreign guests:

  • New York City: thinner European and Asian business.
  • Miami: cooled Latin American pipeline.
  • Los Angeles: headwinds from weaker group demand and airline schedule uncertainty.

Border‑state hotels report the sharpest drops, reflecting both tariff cost pass‑through and cross‑border travel frictions.

Corporate and event travel is softer:

⚠️ Important
Relying heavily on international guests is riskier now; ensure flexible pricing and cancelation policies to absorb last-minute changes and protect occupancy.
  • Global travel buyers are shifting conferences to Canada or Europe to ease visa risks and keep costs predictable.
  • Convention organizers cite travel bans and tougher screenings that complicate speaker lineups and sponsor activations, prompting venue shifts abroad.

Operational responses and group behavior

For travelers and hotel teams, the result is a more fragile booking curve:

  • Shorter booking windows force hotels to price rooms closer to stay dates, rely more on promotions, and hold staffing buffers.
  • Groups insert broader attrition clauses and shorter cutoff dates.
  • In many cities, international feeder demand now comes in bursts tied to fare sales or major events, then drops back.

The industry expects continued softness through late 2025, with hopes that major events like the 2026 World Cup may lift select markets.

Possible longer‑term effects and industry actions

Some analysts see long‑run upsides if tariffs push more domestic manufacturing and stabilize supply chains—potentially reducing renovation volatility. However, those benefits are not expected to offset the immediate hit to U.S. hotel bookings and market‑level RevPAR.

Industry and destination groups are advocating for clearer policy signals and smoother visitor processing:

  • Airports are coordinating with federal agencies to smooth arrivals and reduce bottlenecks at peak hours.
  • According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, a coordinated push—messaging on entry rules, targeted marketing in key source countries, and fare stimulus by airlines—could stabilize inbound flows faster than rate cuts alone.

For readers weighing a trip: check official guidance and entry rules before booking. The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Travel and Tourism Office provides authoritative visitation trends and updates on inbound markets to help travelers and planners time trips and events more effectively. See the NTTO’s NTTO international visitation resources at the Department of Commerce: National Travel and Tourism Office.

Practical steps hotel operators are taking

Operators are revisiting basics to protect share during this demand dip:

  • Target nearer‑term source markets with lighter visa frictions.
  • Offer refundable rates and clear change policies to match shorter booking windows.
  • Pace renovations to avoid pushing rates above price‑sensitive thresholds.
  • Strengthen airline and convention partnerships to secure base business.

Broader travel‑economy considerations

The travel economy will watch airline capacity and pricing closely:

  • If tariffs keep raising input costs, hotels may face higher expenses for electronics, linens, and amenities.
  • Travelers may face pricier airfares and car rentals.
  • The cumulative cost stack can deter long‑haul trips from Europe and Asia and push more Americans toward domestic road trips—helpful for some secondary markets but not a fix for gateway shortfalls.

Key takeaways

  • International arrivals are down, spending is down, and RevPAR is edging lower in markets most reliant on foreign guests.
  • Tariffs and immigration fears are combining to depress both top‑line demand and operational flexibility for U.S. hotels.
  • Industry leaders will be watching for steadier policy signals, improved visa processing, and calmer headlines to help stabilize demand as 2025 progresses.
VisaVerge.com
Learn Today
RevPAR → Revenue per available room; a hotel performance metric calculated by dividing room revenue by the number of available rooms.
Occupancy → The percentage of hotel rooms occupied during a given period, used to measure demand.
Tariffs → Taxes or duties on imported goods that raise costs for materials, furnishings and electronics used by hotels.
Inbound arrivals → International visitors arriving into the United States for tourism, business, or other temporary travel.
Booking window → The time between a guest making a reservation and the arrival date; shorter windows indicate last‑minute bookings.
Cap rates → Capitalization rates used by investors to estimate return on a property, affecting valuation and lending decisions.
Attrition clause → A contract term allowing event organizers to reduce guaranteed room blocks without full charges if minimums aren’t met.
NTTO → National Travel and Tourism Office; a U.S. Department of Commerce office that publishes visitation trends and international travel data.

This Article in a Nutshell

In 2025 U.S. hotel bookings have softened due to a mix of new tariffs and heightened immigration concerns. March data show a 2.3 percentage‑point drop in occupancy and over a 4% decline in RevPAR year‑over‑year; industry forecasts project a 0.1% RevPAR decline and national occupancy around 62.5% for the year. International arrivals plunged 11.6% in March with an anticipated 8.7% fall for 2025, reducing visitor spending by $8.5 billion to $12.5 billion depending on estimates. Gateway cities—New York, Miami, Los Angeles—and border markets bear the brunt, facing softer group demand, more last‑minute bookings (about 40% within four days), and higher input costs from tariffs enacted in May 2025. Hotels are responding with targeted marketing, refundable rates, pacing renovations, and strengthening airline and convention ties while awaiting clearer policy signals and events like the 2026 World Cup to help recovery.

— VisaVerge.com
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Robert Pyne
ByRobert Pyne
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Robert Pyne, a Professional Writer at VisaVerge.com, brings a wealth of knowledge and a unique storytelling ability to the team. Specializing in long-form articles and in-depth analyses, Robert's writing offers comprehensive insights into various aspects of immigration and global travel. His work not only informs but also engages readers, providing them with a deeper understanding of the topics that matter most in the world of travel and immigration.
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