IHG Just Hit 200 Hotels in Canada. Now Count What the Owners Are Actually Paying.
Two hundred flags and nearly 40 more in the pipeline sounds like a brand firing on all cylinders, until you sit down with the owners doing the math on loyalty delivery, PIP obligations, and whether voco and Garner are filling real gaps or just cannibalizing the portfolio they already built.
Let me tell you what a 200-hotel milestone announcement actually is. It's a press release designed to make development prospects feel like they're joining a winning team, and to make existing owners feel validated about a decision they already made. It's brand theater. Good brand theater, I'll give IHG that, but theater nonetheless. The interesting questions are never in the milestone. They're in the 40 hotels sitting in that pipeline and the owners who haven't broken ground yet, staring at their pro formas and wondering if the projections they were handed are going to age like the last round of projections aged. (Spoiler: projections from franchise sales teams age like milk. I have a filing cabinet that proves it.)
Here's what caught my attention. IHG is simultaneously pushing voco into premium urban markets (Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, Niagara Falls) and launching Garner as a midscale conversion play in southern Alberta. Two new brands entering the same country at the same time, targeting different segments, theoretically. But let's be honest about what Garner is... it's IHG's answer to the conversion gold rush, designed to flag independent hotels that don't want a full-fat PIP but do want a reservation system and a loyalty engine. The question I'd ask any owner being pitched Garner right now is the one I ask about every conversion brand: what is the actual, documented loyalty contribution you're projecting, and what has IHG delivered at comparable properties in comparable markets over the last 36 months? Not the system-wide average. Not the top-quartile number from a gateway city. YOUR market. YOUR comp set. If the development rep can't answer that with specifics, you're buying a mood board, not a business plan.
And voco is a fascinating case study in brand positioning ambiguity. IHG describes it as "premium," which in their portfolio slots it above Holiday Inn and below InterContinental. But what does "premium" mean at property level? What's the service model? What's the F&B expectation? What's the staffing differential versus a Crowne Plaza? Because Crowne Plaza is sitting RIGHT there in the same portfolio, and if I'm an owner who just invested in a Crowne Plaza conversion, I want to know exactly how voco is differentiated in a way that doesn't pull my demand. IHG added a Crowne Plaza in Toronto in 2025 and is now signing voco properties in the same city. That's not necessarily wrong, but somebody at development better be able to draw me a very clear line between those two guests, because "premium but different" is not a positioning statement. It's a hedge.
The macro story IHG is leaning on, Destination Canada's forecast of CAD $140 billion in visitor spending with 6% year-over-year growth, is real enough. Domestic travel across Canada is genuinely recovering, and secondary markets are seeing demand that didn't exist three years ago. That's legitimate. But here's where I get protective of owners: a rising tide justifies new supply, it does NOT justify sloppy brand segmentation. Every hotel that opens in Barrie or Woodstock or Pembroke adds keys to markets that are small enough that 80 or 100 new rooms meaningfully shift the supply-demand equation. If you're an existing IHG owner in one of those markets, your brand just became your new competition. And the person who sold you your flag is the same person who sold them theirs. That's not a conspiracy... that's how franchise development works. The brand's incentive is fees from every hotel. Your incentive is RevPAR index at YOUR hotel. Those two things are not always the same thing, and milestone press releases are designed to make you forget that.
So IHG hit 200 in Canada. Congratulations. The number that matters isn't 200. It's the loyalty contribution percentage being delivered to the owner of hotel number 147 in a secondary market who took on PIP debt two years ago based on a projection that hasn't materialized. That owner isn't in the press release. They never are.
If you're a current IHG franchisee in Canada, particularly in a secondary or tertiary market, pull your actual loyalty contribution numbers from the last 12 months and compare them to what was projected when you signed. If there's a gap of more than 5 points, that's a conversation you need to have with your franchise rep before another flag opens in your comp set. If you're an independent being pitched Garner or voco right now, do not sign anything until you've seen actual performance data from comparable properties in comparable markets... not system-wide averages, not gateway city numbers. And run the total brand cost as a percentage of revenue... franchise fees, loyalty assessments, technology fees, reservation contributions, all of it. If that number clears 15% of top-line revenue, the brand needs to demonstrate a revenue premium that exceeds that cost by a margin wide enough to justify the loss of operational flexibility. This is what I call the Brand Reality Gap... brands sell promises at portfolio scale, but you deliver them shift by shift at a single property. Make sure the math works at YOUR property, not at the milestone celebration.