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RLJ Just Bought Itself Three Years. The Price Tag Is the Real Story.

RLJ Lodging Trust pushed its debt maturities out to 2029-2033 while RevPAR is declining. The refinancing math works on paper, but "works" depends on which line you stop reading at.

RLJ Just Bought Itself Three Years. The Price Tag Is the Real Story.
Available Analysis

RLJ Lodging Trust refinanced approximately $1.5 billion in debt in February 2026, extending maturities that were clustered in 2026-2028 out to a 2029-2033 ladder. The headline reads like a win. The real number is the weighted-average interest rate: 4.673%, with roughly 73% fixed or hedged. Management says the annual interest expense increase will be "minimal." Let's decompose what minimal means when you're carrying $2.2 billion in total debt against a portfolio posting negative RevPAR comps.

Q3 2025 comparable RevPAR contracted 5.1%. Q4 improved to negative 1.5%. That's the trajectory the new debt is underwritten against. The $569 million unsecured delayed-draw term loan maturing in 2031 and the $150 million tranche maturing in 2033 are priced on leverage-based SOFR margins. Translation: if operating performance deteriorates further, the cost of that debt gets more expensive precisely when the portfolio can least afford it. The 84 unencumbered hotels out of 92 give RLJ flexibility, but unencumbered assets are only valuable as long as you don't need to encumber them. An owner I worked with once called unencumbered assets "dry powder that everyone congratulates you for having until you actually have to use it."

The $500 million in senior notes due July 2026 was the real forcing function here. That maturity was five months away. The incremental proceeds from the delayed-draw facilities are earmarked to retire those notes. This wasn't optional capital planning. This was a deadline. RLJ met it, and met it on reasonable terms (investment-grade platforms are pricing around SOFR + 150 basis points right now, while non-rated portfolios are paying SOFR + 525). That spread differential is the premium for being an established REIT with a clean balance sheet. It's real, and it matters.

The $1.01 billion in total liquidity ($410 million cash plus $600 million revolver) is substantial. But liquidity is a snapshot. The question is cash flow. If RevPAR stays negative and margins keep compressing, that liquidity gets consumed by operations, CapEx, and the dividend before it ever funds the "strategic acquisitions" management references in investor presentations. The analyst consensus hold rating at $8.64 tells you the market sees the same math I do: refinancing risk removed, operating risk very much present.

The investment case changed, but not in the direction the headline implies. RLJ didn't get stronger. RLJ bought time. Time is valuable... three years of runway against a potential recovery in urban lodging demand is a defensible bet. But the bet only pays if RevPAR inflects positive and margins stabilize before the 2029-2033 maturities arrive. If lodging stays soft through 2027, this refinancing converts from "prudent capital management" to "the last good terms they could get." Check the RevPAR index in 12 months. That's the number that tells you which version of this story we're living in.

Operator's Take

Here's what nobody's telling you... if you own shares in RLJ or any hotel REIT carrying 2026-2028 maturities, the refinancing window is open RIGHT NOW for investment-grade borrowers. It won't stay this favorable if the Fed holds rates and lodging demand keeps softening. If you're an asset manager at a REIT with near-term maturities, don't wait for operating improvement to justify the refi. Get it done while the spread environment still rewards your credit quality. The music is still playing. That's not the same as saying it will be next quarter.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: RLJ Lodging Trust
📊 Hotel leverage and liquidity 📊 Investment-grade REIT financing 📊 SOFR 📊 Debt refinancing 📊 RevPAR 🏢 RLJ Lodging Trust
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.