Today · Jun 15, 2026
IHG Just Opened a 90-Key Holiday Inn Express in Vijayawada. The India Playbook Is the Story.

IHG Just Opened a 90-Key Holiday Inn Express in Vijayawada. The India Playbook Is the Story.

IHG is trying to triple its India footprint to 400-plus hotels by 2031, and Holiday Inn Express is doing the heavy lifting in markets most Western travelers can't find on a map. The question isn't whether 90 rooms in Vijayawada matter... it's whether the franchise economics survive a market that built 250 hotels in four years and then watched occupancy crater to 50%.

Available Analysis

Let me tell you what this headline is actually about, because it's not about a 90-room hotel opening in a Tier 2 Indian city. It's about a franchise machine running at full speed toward a target (400-plus hotels in India by 2031, triple the current footprint) and betting that the mid-scale segment in secondary markets is where the growth lives. Holiday Inn and Holiday Inn Express already account for over 70% of IHG's operating hotels in India. This isn't diversification. This is doubling down on one hand. And if you've spent any time studying how brands scale in emerging markets, you know that the doubling-down phase is where the wins are enormous and the mistakes are brutal.

Vijayawada is a fascinating case study in why that bet cuts both ways. This is a city that experienced a genuine hotel construction boom after it was designated part of Andhra Pradesh's new capital... over 250 hotels opened in a four-year stretch. Then the state government floated a "three capitals" plan, political uncertainty set in, and occupancy dropped to 50-60%. Two hundred and fifty hotels. Half-empty. That's the market IHG just walked into with a flag and a complimentary breakfast buffet. Now, things have stabilized, major brands like Marriott and Radisson have been circling, and India's mid-scale segment is projected to hit INR 530 billion by 2029 at a 13% compound growth rate. The macro story is real. But the micro story... the one that matters to the owner who just signed on for this particular hotel... is a market with a recent history of oversupply and political whiplash. I've read enough FDDs to know that nobody puts Vijayawada's occupancy crash in the franchise sales presentation. They put the 13% CAGR.

Here's what I keep coming back to with IHG's India strategy: the brand promise of Holiday Inn Express is beautifully simple. Clean room, good breakfast, reliable WiFi, fair price. It's a concept my dad could have executed in his sleep (and basically did, at properties across the Southeast, for decades). The Deliverable Test question isn't whether the concept works... it's whether the franchise economics work for the owner in a market where 250 competitors materialized overnight and the political environment can shift the demand curve in a single election cycle. The press release talks about "smart design, modern comfort, and unmatched value." Okay. But unmatched value for whom? The guest paying the room rate, or the owner paying the franchise fees, the loyalty assessments, the brand-mandated vendor costs, and the PIP capital? India's mid-scale market is growing, yes. It's also intensely competitive, with Marriott, Hilton, Accor, and every domestic brand fighting for the same traveler. Growth rate is not the same thing as profit margin. (I keep a filing cabinet full of FDDs that prove this point, and it gets thicker every year.)

What I actually find interesting about this opening is what it signals about IHG's conversion strategy globally. Their Q1 2026 numbers show conversions representing 53% of signings worldwide. More than half. That tells you the growth isn't primarily new-build anymore... it's convincing existing owners to swap flags. And in a market like India, where hundreds of independent and locally-branded hotels are sitting at sub-60% occupancy wondering what went wrong, the conversion pitch practically writes itself: "Join our system, get our loyalty engine, fill those rooms." The question I'd be asking if I were the owner in Vijayawada is simple: what's the actual loyalty contribution going to be? Not projected. Actual. Because I watched a family lose their hotel once because the projected loyalty number was 35-40% and the actual number was 22%. The gap between those two figures was the gap between keeping the property and losing everything. That family trusted the brand. The brand trusted the projection. Nobody stress-tested the downside.

So yes, congratulations on the opening. Genuinely. A 90-key hotel near a railway station in a growing Indian city is a perfectly reasonable bet. But the story here isn't ribbon-cutting... it's the structural question of whether IHG's sprint to 400 hotels is building a portfolio of profitable franchisees or a pipeline of flag-count metrics that look great on an earnings call and tell you nothing about owner-level returns. I've been brand-side. I know how the incentives work. The development team gets credit for signings. The integration team inherits the reality. And the owner? The owner finds out in year three whether the projection was a promise or a wish. The filing cabinet doesn't lie.

Operator's Take

Here's what matters if you're an owner being pitched an IHG flag in an emerging market right now... any emerging market, not just India. Ask for actual loyalty contribution data from comparable properties in similar-tier cities, not portfolio averages and not projections. Demand it in writing. If the franchise sales team can't produce comp-specific actuals, that's your answer. This is what I call the Brand Reality Gap... brands sell promises at scale, properties deliver them shift by shift, and the gap between the two is where owner equity goes to die. Run your own downside scenario at 50% occupancy (because Vijayawada already lived that reality once) and see if the total brand cost as a percentage of revenue still makes sense. If it only works in the base case, it doesn't work. Get your own demand study from someone the brand isn't paying, and make sure the political risk in your market is priced into the model before you sign.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: IHG
Wyndham's Third Goa Property Is a Bet on a Market That Was Declining Six Months Ago

Wyndham's Third Goa Property Is a Bet on a Market That Was Declining Six Months Ago

Wyndham just signed a 120-key luxury hotel in North Goa targeting a Q4 2029 opening, doubling down on a market that was the only major Indian destination showing RevPAR declines as recently as late 2025. The confidence is impressive... the question is whether the math justifies it or the ambition is doing the heavy lifting.

Let me tell you what I love about this signing, and then let me tell you what keeps me up at night about it. Wyndham Grand Goa Vagator... 120 keys, luxury positioning, MICE and destination weddings, Q4 2029 opening... checks every box a franchise development team would want checked. North Goa. Vagator specifically, which is the kind of location that photographs beautifully and makes the investor deck sing. Wyndham's third property in the market, part of a broader India push targeting 150 properties over the next few years. The ambition is real. But ambition and I have a complicated relationship, because I spent 15 years watching ambition write checks that properties couldn't cash.

Here's the part that nobody in the press release is going to mention. As recently as late 2025, Goa was the only prominent hotel market in India showing a decline in RevPAR. The only one. While the rest of the country was posting 10.8% RevPAR growth and an all-India ADR north of ₹8,600, Goa was softening... losing ground to short-haul international destinations, emerging domestic leisure markets, and what industry analysts politely called "a correction in hotel tariffs." Now, has the market shown signs of recovery in early 2026? Yes. March data suggests consecutive growth, driven by weddings, MICE, and corporate demand (exactly the segments this property is targeting, which is either smart strategy or convenient timing, depending on your level of optimism). But signing a luxury new-build with a three-and-a-half-year development horizon based on a market that just started recovering from a dip? That takes conviction. I respect conviction. I also know what happens when conviction isn't stress-tested against the downside.

What I want to know... and what you should want to know if you're an owner being pitched a similar deal anywhere in India... is what the loyalty contribution projection looks like. Because Wyndham is the world's largest hotel franchising company by property count, but the Wyndham Grand tier is not where their distribution engine is strongest. They're phenomenal at select-service, at the Ramada and Days Inn level, at putting heads in beds for value travelers. Luxury leisure in a resort market? That's a different guest, a different booking channel, and a different expectation for what "brand" delivers. I've read enough FDDs to know that the gap between a franchisor's projected contribution and actual delivery can be... let's call it educational. (My filing cabinet has some stories about that gap that would make your stomach turn.) The developer, Hotel Library Club Private Limited, is betting that the Wyndham Grand flag adds enough to justify whatever the total brand cost ends up being. If I were advising that ownership group, I'd want to see actual performance data from comparable Wyndham Grand properties in similar resort markets, not projections. Actuals. Because projections are a mood board, and actuals are the property you're actually going to operate.

The bigger story here is Wyndham's strategic shift in India... moving from an average of 60-65 keys per property to 100-120 keys, exploring management contracts (they've been primarily a franchise play in India until now), and layering in premium brands alongside their bread-and-butter select-service portfolio. That's not just growth. That's repositioning. They're trying to tell the market they can play upscale, and Goa is the proving ground. Which means this property carries more weight than its 120 keys would suggest. If Wyndham Grand Goa Vagator delivers... if the guest experience matches the brand promise, if the loyalty engine actually drives meaningful occupancy, if the MICE positioning captures the wedding-and-conference demand that's surging in Goa... it validates the entire upmarket India strategy. If it doesn't, it becomes a cautionary tale about a franchise company reaching beyond its core competency. I've watched that exact movie play out with other brands trying to stretch into segments where their distribution strength doesn't naturally reach. Sometimes the stretch works. Sometimes you end up with a beautiful property flying a flag that doesn't bring the guests who justify the fee.

The market fundamentals aren't terrible. India's hotel industry is genuinely growing. Goa specifically is recovering. And a 2029 opening gives the market three-plus years to mature. But three years is also enough time for every other premium brand eyeing Goa (and there are several) to break ground. Wyndham already has a Dolce by Wyndham signed for Goa, opening 2030. So that's potentially three Wyndham-flagged properties and a Dolce all competing in the same leisure market. At some point, you're not expanding your footprint. You're diluting your own demand. And the person who pays for that dilution isn't the franchisor collecting fees on four properties instead of two. It's the individual owner at each one, wondering why their loyalty contribution isn't hitting the number they were shown during the sales process.

Operator's Take

This is what I call the Brand Reality Gap... the distance between what gets presented in the signing announcement and what happens at property level three years after opening. If you're an independent owner in a resort market being pitched a premium flag conversion right now, whether it's Wyndham Grand or anyone else, here's your move. Ask for actual trailing performance data from comparable properties in similar markets... not projections, not system-wide averages, actual comp-set-relevant numbers. Calculate your total brand cost as a percentage of revenue, including every fee, every mandated vendor, every loyalty assessment. If that number exceeds 15% and the brand can't demonstrate a revenue premium that covers it with room to spare, you're subsidizing their growth strategy with your margin. And if the market you're in showed softness in the last 18 months, stress-test the deal against that scenario recurring, not just the recovery scenario everyone's excited about today. The deal has to work on the bad year, not just the good one.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: Wyndham
148 Keys in Bengaluru. A New GM. And the Bigger Story Nobody's Covering.

148 Keys in Bengaluru. A New GM. And the Bigger Story Nobody's Covering.

Marriott just installed a 17-year company veteran as GM at one of its most symbolically important properties in Asia. The interesting part isn't the appointment... it's what it tells you about how the world's biggest hotel company is building its bench for a market it's betting everything on.

A guy gets promoted to general manager at a 148-room Fairfield in India. That's not news. That happens every week at every brand on the planet. Someone moves up, someone moves on, corporate sends out a press release with a headshot and three paragraphs about "passion for hospitality" and "commitment to excellence." Nobody reads it. Nobody should.

But this one caught my eye. Not because of who got the job. Because of where the job is and what Marriott is doing around it.

This particular Fairfield... Bengaluru Rajajinagar... was the first Fairfield by Marriott to open anywhere in Asia. October 2013. That's not a random dot on a map. That's a flag in the ground. Marriott chose this property, this brand, this market to announce that they were serious about the moderate tier in India. The guy they just put in the chair has been inside the Marriott system since 2009. Seventeen years. Came up through operations, ran another Fairfield property before this one. This isn't a lateral move... it's Marriott putting a known operator into a symbolically important seat while they try to scale to 500 hotels and 50,000 rooms in India by 2030. That's not a pipeline. That's a land grab. And the people they're installing at property level tell you more about their strategy than any investor presentation ever will.

Here's what I think about when I see moves like this. Bengaluru's hotel market is running hot... RevPAR growth north of 29% year-over-year in early 2025, demand projected to outpace supply growth by nearly 3 points annually through 2030. That's the kind of market where you don't need a superstar GM. You need a dependable one. Someone who knows the system, knows the brand standards, won't improvise when things get busy, and can train the next three people behind him. Marriott isn't looking for cowboys in India right now. They're looking for replicable operators who can stamp out consistent execution across dozens of properties as they scale. I've watched this play out before... different brand, different decade, different continent, same playbook. When a company is in growth mode, the GM appointments tell you whether they're building a bench or filling chairs. There's a massive difference.

The owner here is Samhi Hotels, one of the most aggressive hotel investors in India, focused almost entirely on internationally branded properties. They're the ones writing the checks. And when you're an owner with a 148-key select-service running at $61 a night in a market with this kind of demand tailwind, what you want more than anything is operational consistency and cost discipline. You don't want a GM who's going to reinvent the breakfast buffet. You want someone who's going to hit flow-through targets, keep Bonvoy contribution where the brand says it should be, and not surprise you on the capital call. That alignment between what the brand needs (replicable operators for scale) and what the owner needs (predictable execution) is the real story here. When those two things line up, everybody wins. When they don't... well, I've seen that movie too, and nobody enjoys the ending.

What this means for the rest of us watching from the other side of the world is simple. Marriott is building an operating army in India the same way they built one in North America 20 years ago... promote from within, move people between properties in the same brand tier, create a pipeline of GMs who speak the same operational language. If you're competing with Marriott in secondary or tertiary markets anywhere in Asia (or if you're an owner considering a flag), pay attention to the bench, not the brand deck. The people running these hotels will determine whether the brand promise holds or leaks. And right now, Marriott is being very deliberate about who sits in those chairs.

Operator's Take

If you're an owner or asset manager with branded properties in high-growth international markets, stop skimming past GM appointments. The bench is the strategy. A brand that promotes from within and rotates operators across the same tier is building consistency. A brand that's pulling GMs from outside the system or cross-pollinating from unrelated tiers is scrambling. Ask your management company one question this week: "What's our GM succession plan for the next 24 months?" If they can't answer it clearly, that's not a staffing issue. That's a strategic gap. And you're the one who pays for it when the chair goes empty for three months and your scores crater.

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Source: Google News: Marriott
Hyatt's Betting Big on the Himalayas. Here's What They're Really Chasing.

Hyatt's Betting Big on the Himalayas. Here's What They're Really Chasing.

Hyatt just broke ground on a 150-key Regency in Gangtok, Sikkim... a place most American hotel people couldn't find on a map. But the play here isn't one hotel. It's a $55 billion market that every major brand is racing to own.

Available Analysis

Let me tell you what caught my eye about this. It's not the hotel. A 150-room Hyatt Regency with 42,000 square feet of meeting space, a spa, a pool, and a casino next door... fine. That's a nice property. What caught my eye is the math behind the math. Hyatt currently operates 55 hotels in India. Their CEO said publicly they plan to quintuple that footprint over the next five years. That's 275 hotels. In one country. While simultaneously every other major brand is sprinting into the same market. Hilton wants to quadruple their India pipeline. IHG is pushing hard. Marriott's been there for years. The Indian hotel market is projected to more than double from $23.5 billion to $55.7 billion by 2031, and every flag in the world wants a piece of it.

Here's the part that matters for operators. This isn't about Gangtok. Sikkim had 1.7 million tourist arrivals last year (71,000 foreign visitors), and that's a growing leisure market, sure. But the real story is that Hyatt just appointed a dedicated President for India and Southwest Asia, effective April 1st. You don't create a country-level leadership position unless you're about to move fast and spend aggressively. That's the organizational signal. When a brand restructures leadership to focus on a single geography, what follows is a franchise sales push the likes of which that market hasn't seen. I've watched this exact sequence play out in China a decade ago, in the Middle East before that. The playbook doesn't change.

What the press release doesn't tell you is what this kind of expansion velocity does to brand standards execution. Going from 55 to 275 hotels in five years means roughly 44 new openings per year. Every single one needs a trained team, a functioning supply chain, and a management structure that can deliver whatever the Hyatt Regency brand promises. Sikkim's infrastructure alone... we're talking about the Eastern Himalayas here... creates challenges that a select-service in Dallas never has to think about. Construction timelines in mountain environments. Seasonal access issues. Labor pools that may not have experience with international luxury standards. The Grand Hyatt they signed in Kasauli last year isn't expected to open until early 2028. That's a three-year development cycle for a single property.

I worked with an owner years ago who got caught up in a brand's "growth market" excitement. They were one of the first franchisees in a secondary market the brand was targeting aggressively. The pitch was beautiful... untapped demand, growing middle class, first-mover advantage. What nobody mentioned was that the brand's reservation system had virtually zero loyalty contribution in that market because the brand hadn't built awareness yet. The owner was essentially paying full franchise fees for a flag that didn't drive any business the owner couldn't have driven themselves. It took four years before the loyalty pipeline delivered what the franchise sales deck promised in year one.

Look... I'm not saying this is a bad move for Hyatt. The India growth thesis is real. The numbers support it. But here's what I'd be watching if I were an existing Hyatt franchisee anywhere in the world. When a brand goes into hypergrowth mode in one region, corporate attention follows the growth. Development resources, marketing dollars, technology investment... it flows where the expansion is. If you're running a Hyatt in the U.S. and you've been waiting on system upgrades or brand support, understand that the company just told you where its priorities are for the next five years. That's not a criticism. It's just the reality of how brands allocate finite resources. The question nobody's asking is whether the existing portfolio gets better or just bigger.

Operator's Take

This is what I call the Brand Reality Gap... the distance between what a brand promises at the development conference and what it delivers shift by shift at property level. If you're an existing Hyatt franchisee in the U.S., get ahead of this now. Ask your brand rep directly what percentage of global marketing and technology investment is being allocated to India and APAC over the next three years. Get it in writing. And if you're an independent owner being courted by ANY major brand right now, understand that their growth targets are driving the conversation, not your RevPAR. Make them prove the loyalty contribution with actuals from comparable markets, not projections from a sales deck.

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Source: Google News: Hyatt
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