Today · Apr 12, 2026
Three-Hour TSA Lines Just Handed Airport Hotels a Gift. Don't Waste It.

Three-Hour TSA Lines Just Handed Airport Hotels a Gift. Don't Waste It.

The government DHS shutdown is stranding thousands of travelers at major airports right as spring break kicks off. If you're running an airport-adjacent hotel and you're not already adjusting your playbook, you're leaving money on the counter.

I managed an airport hotel during the 2018-2019 shutdown. Thirty-five days. And here's what I remember most... it wasn't the surge in walk-ins that caught us off guard. It was how completely unprepared the front desk was to handle people who were angry, exhausted, and desperate for a room at 11 PM on a Tuesday. We hadn't briefed the team. We hadn't updated our day-rate policy. We hadn't even thought about early check-in availability because nobody on my staff had been through this before. I had, but I hadn't pushed that knowledge down to the people who needed it. That cost us. Not in lost rooms... we sold plenty. It cost us in reviews, in guest experience, in a staff that felt ambushed every night for a month.

This one's worse. Four weeks into a DHS funding fight, over 50,000 TSA officers are working without pay. Call-out rates have doubled nationally to around 6%... and at some airports it's not even close to that. One hub reported a 53% call-out rate on a single day last week. Three hundred TSA employees have just walked away entirely since February 14th. And their first fully missed paycheck hits tomorrow, March 14th. So if you think the lines are bad now (three to four hours at Atlanta, Houston, New Orleans), wait until next week when people who've been showing up out of duty finally decide they can't make rent. This is going to get worse before it gets better.

The math runs in two directions and you need to figure out which side you're on. If you're an airport hotel or anything within a 15-minute drive of a major hub... you're about to see distressed demand that books same-day, often at rate, and doesn't shop. These are families who missed connections, business travelers stranded overnight, people who just spent three hours in a security line and will pay whatever you're asking for a clean room and a hot shower. This demand is real, it's inelastic, and it's happening right now. Your revenue manager should be watching OTA pickup in real-time, your front desk should have a day-rate card ready to go, and your housekeeping team needs to understand that early check-in requests are going to spike (which means flip times need to tighten). On the other side... if you're a resort property dependent on fly-in leisure guests, particularly Florida Gulf Coast, Hawaii, mountain destinations... start calling your group contacts today. Not tomorrow. Today. Spring break groups are making cancellation decisions right now, and you'd rather know about attrition this afternoon than discover it in your no-show report Saturday morning.

Here's the angle I haven't seen anyone talk about. Drive-to leisure is about to have a moment. Gas prices are at a five-year low. Families who were planning to fly to Orlando are looking at those TSA lines and doing the math on loading up the minivan and heading to the Smokies or the Outer Banks or the Poconos instead. If you're a GM at a drive-to leisure property within four hours of a major metro, you should be pushing rate, not discounting. Your comp set is about to get a demand bump that none of you planned for. The properties that capture it will be the ones that are paying attention this week... not the ones who figure it out next Monday when they look at their weekend numbers and wonder what happened.

One more thing. I've watched enough of these government shutdowns to know how they end... eventually, suddenly, and with a retroactive pay bill that makes everyone in Washington feel good about themselves. But "eventually" could be next week or it could be June. The 2018-2019 shutdown lasted 35 days and the recovery took weeks after that because you can't just flip a switch and get experienced security officers back to full staffing when you've spent a month treating them like they don't matter. Plan for this lasting through April at minimum. Staff accordingly. Brief your teams accordingly. And if you haven't already reached out to your local airport authority to understand what's actually happening on the ground at your nearest hub (not what CNN is showing you... what's actually happening), pick up the phone.

Operator's Take

If you're running an airport-adjacent property, get your front desk leads together before this weekend and establish a distressed-traveler protocol... day rates, early check-in thresholds, late checkout policy, and a script for handling frustrated guests who just spent three hours in a security line. If you're at a fly-in resort or destination property, call your top five group contacts today and ask them directly about attrition... you need that information now, not when it shows up as empty rooms. And if you're at a drive-to leisure property within a few hours of a major metro, push rate this weekend. Don't discount. The demand is coming to you whether you ask for it or not.

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Source: Vertexaisearch
Your Airport Hotel Is About to Print Money. Your Beach Resort? Call Your Revenue Manager. Now.

Your Airport Hotel Is About to Print Money. Your Beach Resort? Call Your Revenue Manager. Now.

A four-week government shutdown just collided with the biggest spring break travel week of the year, and the hotels that saw this coming 48 hours ago are already winning while everyone else scrambles.

Available Analysis

I managed an airport hotel during the 2018-2019 government shutdown. Thirty-five days. And I can tell you exactly what happens... it starts with a trickle of confused travelers dragging their bags through your lobby at 10 PM asking if you have rooms, and within 72 hours your front desk team is running a refugee operation. The phone rings nonstop. Your OTA rankings spike because you're suddenly the only game with availability within a mile of the terminal. And your housekeeping team, the one you've been running lean because occupancy was supposed to be "moderate" this week? They're drowning.

Here's what nobody's talking about yet. The math on this shutdown is brutal and it's getting worse. TSA lines at ATL, ORD, LAX, DFW, and JFK are running 2-3 hours. Spring break families who planned six months ago are standing in those lines with toddlers melting down and doing the mental calculation: do we wait another two hours, or do we get in the car and drive to the Smokies? The travel industry is hemorrhaging something like $63 million a day in lost activity. That money doesn't just vanish. It moves. And right now it's moving from fly-to destinations to drive-to markets at a pace that should have every revenue manager in the Poconos, the Catskills, and the Texas Hill Country pushing rates and inventory onto every OTA and social channel they can reach. Today. Not tomorrow. Today.

I watched a GM at a fly-to resort property handle a similar demand suppression situation years ago. Cancellations started trickling in on a Monday morning, and by Wednesday he'd lost 40 rooms for the week. But here's what he did that was smart... he didn't wait for the cancellations to come to him. He had his front desk team call every reservation arriving Thursday through Sunday with a simple message: "We know travel is complicated right now. We've arranged early check-in starting at noon. If your plans change, we're happy to work with you on rebooking." He saved about half those rooms. Not because the offer was extraordinary. Because nobody else was calling. The guest felt seen. That's it. That's the whole trick. Most of those guests were already on the phone with the airline. Nobody from the hotel had reached out. He was the first person in the travel chain who acted like he gave a damn.

If you're running an airport property right now, activate your stranded traveler protocol (and if you don't have one written down, you should have had one yesterday... build it tonight). Front desk scripts for distressed travelers. Flexible check-in and check-out windows. A direct contact at your nearest airline operations desk. And for the love of everything, tell your revenue manager to stop running static rates. This is real-time pricing territory. Distressed demand is the most price-insensitive demand you'll see all year... these are people who missed connections and just want a bed. Don't gouge them (that's how you end up on the news), but don't leave $30 per key on the table either. If you're a fly-to resort... Florida, Caribbean gateway, mountain markets... watch your cancellation pace this week like you watch your bank account. If it's accelerating, get on the phone with booked guests before they cancel on you. And if you're a convention hotel with groups arriving in March and April? Pull the attendee origin data. If 60% of your group is flying through a major hub, your sales director needs to be on the phone with that meeting planner right now, not Friday. Right now.

Look... shutdowns end. This one will too. But the operational lessons don't expire. Every time I've lived through one of these disruptions (and it's been more than a few), the hotels that won were the ones that moved first. Not the ones with the best technology or the biggest brand behind them. The ones where somebody... a GM, a revenue manager, a front desk supervisor... looked at the situation on Monday and said "this is going to get worse before it gets better, and here's what we're doing about it." That's the whole game. Everything else is commentary.

Operator's Take

If you're a GM at an airport property, get your stranded traveler protocol in writing tonight and brief your front desk team tomorrow morning before first shift. Flexible check-in, airline ops contacts, and real-time rate adjustments... not next week. If you're running a fly-to resort or convention hotel, pull your cancellation pace report right now and start proactive outreach to every reservation arriving in the next 10 days. The GMs who pick up the phone this week keep the rooms. The ones who wait for the cancellation email lose them.

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Source: InnBrief Analysis — National News
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