Today · Apr 17, 2026
A 50-Room Super 8 Just Traded in West Texas. The Conversion Plan Is the Story.

A 50-Room Super 8 Just Traded in West Texas. The Conversion Plan Is the Story.

A Houston partnership bought a 50-room economy hotel in the Permian Basin and plans to convert it to Best Western. The per-key price wasn't disclosed, but the brand-switching math in a market where economy demand dropped 3% last year tells you everything about where small-portfolio investors see value right now.

A 50-room Super 8 in Stanton, Texas... built 2015, sitting on I-20 in the Permian Basin... just changed hands from a Dallas-based owner to a Houston private partnership. Marcus & Millichap brokered it. No sale price disclosed. The buyer's plan: convert to Best Western.

The undisclosed price is frustrating but not surprising for a deal this size. Private partnerships buying sub-$5M hospitality assets accounted for nearly 75% of total hotel deal volume in 2025, per Marcus & Millichap's own 2026 outlook. Most of these trades happen quietly. What makes this one worth decomposing isn't the price (which I can't verify). It's the conversion logic. Economy hotels saw demand decline nearly 3% year-over-year in 2025. The buyer looked at a functioning 11-year-old asset in an energy-driven secondary market and decided the problem wasn't the building. The problem was the flag.

That's a bet worth examining. A Super 8 to Best Western conversion means moving from Wyndham's economy tier to Best Western's midscale positioning. The buyer is pricing in higher ADR capture from Permian Basin corporate and energy-sector travelers... guests whose per diems and company rate programs favor midscale flags over economy. The conversion cost (PIP, signage, FF&E upgrades, franchise transfer fees, training) on a 50-key property built in 2015 should be manageable... the physical plant is relatively new. But "manageable" still means real dollars. Best Western's franchise application fee, royalty structure, and required property improvements need to pencil against the incremental rate premium in a market where occupancy is tied to oil prices. If West Texas Intermediate drops $15, your corporate demand evaporates and your shiny new flag is competing for leisure travelers who were perfectly happy at the Super 8 rate.

The broader signal here is structural. When private investors are buying economy assets specifically to rebrand them midscale, that tells you the economy segment's value proposition is under pressure from both sides... guests trading down from midscale have more options, and guests at the economy level are increasingly choosing alternative lodging. Construction costs make new-build midscale prohibitive in secondary markets, so conversion becomes the path of least resistance. Marcus & Millichap has brokered at least four similar-profile hotel sales in the past month alone (a former Hampton in Minnesota, a Comfort Suites in Michigan, this Super 8). The pattern is consistent: existing assets, sub-150 keys, brand repositioning as the value-creation thesis.

One variable I'd watch. Wyndham is actively investing in franchisee retention and conversion of independents into its system. Losing a Super 8 to Best Western in a market they'd presumably want to hold is a data point. One trade doesn't make a trend. But if the economy-to-midscale conversion pipeline accelerates, Wyndham's economy portfolio... which is the foundation of their room count... starts looking less sticky than their investor presentations suggest.

Operator's Take

If you're an independent or economy-flag owner in an energy market, this deal is your case study. Run the math on your own conversion... not the franchise sales rep's version, but the real total cost including PIP, downtime during renovation, training turnover, and the 12-18 months it takes for a new flag's loyalty program to start delivering. Then stress-test your ADR assumption against a commodity price drop. If the conversion only works when oil is above $70, you don't have a strategy... you have a prayer. For owners already in the midscale space in these markets, pay attention to your comp set. A new Best Western converted from a Super 8 is going to undercut your rate to build occupancy in year one. Know your floor and protect your rate integrity before it shows up on the STR report.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Read full analysis → ← Show less
Source: Google News: Wyndham
End of Stories