TheTravigator

333
Interior

India’s Interior Is Open for Business

Special Report New Delhi Wednesday, 20 May 2026 Hospitality & Real Estate
Regional Hotels · Capital Flow · Domestic Demand

India’s Interior Is Open for Business

As metro hotels fill up, capital is flooding into India’s tier 2 and tier 3 cities — rewiring where the country’s hospitality economy grows, and who profits from it.
National Occ. 64% Average hotel occupancy in 2025
RevPAR ₹5,522 Revenue per available room in 2025
New Rooms 19K+ Added through builds, conversions and affiliations
Transactions ₹2,900cr Hotel deal volume in 2024, according to JLL

For most of the last decade, India’s hotel story was a story about eight cities. Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Pune, Kolkata and Ahmedabad absorbed the bulk of branded supply, institutional capital and management attention. Everything else was afterthought.

That calculus has changed, and changed fast. More than half of all new hotel signings over the past three years landed outside major metros. In 2025 alone, over 19,000 rooms entered the supply chain across India through new builds, conversions of existing properties and brand affiliations — largely in cities that, until recently, had no branded hotel at all.

What is driving the shift

Three forces converging at once

The first force is infrastructure. Regional aviation has expanded significantly — new airports, upgraded terminals and increased frequencies on tier 2 routes have compressed travel times that once made a weekend trip to Varanasi or Coimbatore an ordeal. Expressways have further opened corridors that previously had no hospitality catchment.

The second is digital discovery. OTAs and social media have dramatically shortened what the industry calls “destination adoption cycles” — the time from when a traveller first hears of a place to when they actually book a room there. An Instagram reel of a heritage haveli in Jodhpur or a yoga retreat in Rishikesh now converts to bookings within weeks, not years.

The third, and arguably the most structural, is the rise of the domestic traveller. Domestic bookings now account for 65% of hotel demand nationally, with mobile bookings reaching 55% of all reservations. These travellers are younger, more experience-driven and increasingly willing to travel beyond the beaten path.

“Wellness, spiritual and cultural tourism is expanding at roughly 20% CAGR — drawing higher-yield stays, longer lengths of stay and a traveller profile that did not exist at scale five years ago.”

MMT-CRISIL / McKinsey synthesis, FY2025
Destination breakdown

Where the rooms are going

Relative demand momentum by corridor type — illustrative index, 2025
Spiritual / pilgrimage
High
Wellness & retreat
High
Heritage & culture
Strong
Tier 2 business hubs
Rising
Metro gateway cities
Mature

The spiritual corridor alone — Rishikesh, Varanasi, Bodh Gaya, Ayodhya and Hampi — has become one of the most contested battlegrounds for branded supply. Foreign independent travellers, who now represent 38% of inbound visitors to India, increasingly route their itineraries through these destinations, favouring boutique and heritage properties over the large-format business hotels that dominate metro markets.

Capital and operators

Asset-light models accelerate the land grab

The operating playbook for this expansion is almost uniformly asset-light. Marriott is scaling via its Series brands and franchise structures. Wyndham has leaned hard into conversion franchising — signing existing independent hotels under its flags rather than waiting for greenfield builds. Accor, Taj and ITC have similarly prioritised conversions and management contracts that require minimal capital from the chain itself.

Franchise-first expansion Global brands are entering smaller markets faster through conversions, affiliations and franchise structures.
Local owners gain distribution Independent assets get access to brand systems, demand channels, standards and revenue management capability.
Institutional ownership rises Institutional ownership now covers roughly 45% of chain-affiliated rooms in India.
Debt costs still matter Debt costs remain a constraint at roughly 9.6% per annum in 2025, but the environment has eased slightly.

Institutional ownership now covers roughly 45% of chain-affiliated rooms in India — a figure that has climbed steadily as private equity and real-estate funds recognise the spread between acquisition costs in tier 2 markets and the RevPAR trajectories available there.

Structural headwinds

The problems money alone cannot solve

Talent Skilled-staff shortage 60% of new regional hotels report acute gaps in trained hospitality staff, from front desk to F&B management.
Access Last-mile connectivity Despite expressway expansion, sub-district and rural resort destinations still face chronic access and logistics gaps.
Policy State approval delays Multi-layer state and municipal licensing remains a significant drag on project timelines in many tier 2 and tier 3 states.
Margins OTA margin compression Heavy OTA reliance erodes net RevPAR at the very moment operators need cash flow for ramp-up.
B2B Implications

What this means for travel industry players

For corporate travel managers, MICE buyers and tour wholesalers, the shift creates both opportunity and operational complexity. Metro-centric rooming lists and preferred-hotel programmes are increasingly disconnected from where Indian demand is actually flowing.

Players who pivot to regional cluster strategies — packaging wellness, heritage or spiritual experiences with local operators — will have access to a yield profile that metro inventory simply cannot match.

The strategic imperatives are clear: distribution control matters more than room count. Operators who build direct-booking capability and reduce OTA dependency will generate structurally better returns. Workforce upskilling, not just recruitment, is the moat that will separate professional platforms from the proliferating crowd of flag-and-forget conversions.

Outlook

Three scenarios for 2026–2028

Cluster winners emerge Regionally focused platforms that control distribution and build local talent capture disproportionate RevPAR growth in high-yield spiritual and wellness corridors.
Institutional consolidation Fragmented regional supply gets rolled into professionally managed portfolios as REIT-adjacent structures and private equity capital seek scale economies.
Oversupply risk rises Without destination governance, fast-growing corridors risk quality dilution and margin erosion — repeating the mistakes of early metro oversupply cycles.

India’s hospitality renaissance beyond the metros is real, measurable and accelerating.

But it will not be won by whoever signs the most flags. It will be won by whoever builds the deepest operational moat in the fewest markets — and has the governance discipline to hold it.

India’s interior is open for business — and hospitality capital is finally paying attention.

India tier 2 hotel growth RevPAR India 2025 Wellness tourism India Institutional hotel investment Hotel franchising India OTA distribution Domestic travel trends Staffing shortage hotels India
EDITORIAL NOTE — THETRAVIGATOR.COM

This report is part of TheTravigator’s continuing news coverage of the travel, tourism, aviation, and hospitality sectors. Our editorial team publishes industry news, market insights, partnerships, policy developments, and business updates relevant to the travel trade community. For press releases, partnership opportunities, advertising enquiries, or editorial collaborations, please contact our editorial desk at:

INFO@THETRAVIGATOR.COM

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
*