Elizabeth S. Perkins
While the travel industry faced several macroeconomic headwinds in 2025, we are generally pleased with the performance and resilience of our portfolio. Comparable hotels total revenue was $319,000,000 for the quarter, and $1,400,000,000 for the full year 2025, down approximately 2.1% to the same periods of 2024. Comparable hotels adjusted hotel EBITDA was approximately $99,000,000 for the quarter, and $474,000,000 for the year, down approximately 8.6% as compared to the same periods of 2024. Fourth quarter comparable hotels’ RevPAR was $107, down 2.6%. ADR was $152, down 90 basis points, and occupancy was 70%, down 1.7% as compared to the fourth quarter 2024. For the year ended 12/31/2025, comparable hotels’ RevPAR was $118, down 1.6%. ADR was $159, down only 10 basis points, and occupancy was 74%, down 1.6% to 2024. Our portfolio continues to outperform the industry, where STR reports RevPAR of $100 and average occupancy of 62% for 2025, highlighting the relative strength of our portfolio demand despite year-over-year disruption. Our teams have done a tremendous job adjusting to reoptimize the mix of business at our hotels where there were meaningful shifts in government and other demand segments, as well as maximizing revenue around special events to strengthen market share and performance for our overall portfolio. Market performance varied significantly during the quarter, with a mix of strong RevPAR gains in several markets and ongoing headwinds impacting others due to demand shifts and challenging year-over-year comparisons. Our team remains focused on hotel and market specific strategies as well as operational execution to maximize performance. Top RevPAR performing hotels during the quarter as compared to the same period last year included our Embassy Suites in Anchorage, Alaska, which was up almost 42%, our Homewood Suites in Tukwila, Washington, which was up 33%, our Courtyard in Franklin, Tennessee, which was up almost 22%, and our Residence Inn in Renton, Washington, which was up over 21% as the hotel lapsed Boeing strikes in 2024. Other top performers included our Manassas Residence Inn, St. Louis Hampton Inn, and Nashville Airport TownePlace Suites. Hotels with significant year-over-year RevPAR declines for the quarter included our San Bernardino Residence Inn, our Arlington Hampton Inn & Suites, our Panama City TownePlace Suites, our Huntsville Hampton Inn & Suites, and our Orlando SpringHill and Fairfield Inn & Suites, which benefited from Hurricane Milton business during 2024. Based on preliminary results for the month of January 2026, comparable hotel RevPAR declined by approximately 1.5% as compared to January 2025. Impacted by travel disruption related to winter weather, challenging comps related to wildfire recovery related business, and the presidential inauguration last year, as well as ramp from our Nashville Motto, which opened at the December. Performance has improved in February, bringing comparable RevPAR growth slightly positive year to date. Turning back to the fourth quarter, weekday occupancy was down 140 basis points and weekend occupancy was down only 50 basis points as compared to the same period last year. Encouragingly, occupancy growth turned positive in December, with weekday occupancy up 10 basis points after being down around 2% in October and November, and weekend occupancy was up 90 after being down around 1% in October and November. ADR declines were more pronounced on weekdays, down 1% for the quarter while weekend ADR was essentially flat. As previously mentioned, following a pullback in October and November due to travel disruption related to the government shutdown, we began to see improvement in December. Highlighting same store room night channel mix for the quarter, brand.com bookings were flat year over year at 40%, OTA bookings were up 110 basis points to 14%, property direct was up 70 basis points at 25%, and GDS bookings were down 80 basis points to 16%. Looking at fourth quarter same store segmentation, BAR was around flat at 33% of our occupancy mix, other discounts grew 30 basis points to 31% of mix, corporate and local negotiated declined 150 basis points to 16% of our mix, and government declined 100 basis points to 4% of our mix. Group business mix improved 130 basis points to 15%. Our fourth quarter channel mix and segmentation trends highlight the relative strength of our leisure consumer, the pullback in government and other business transient as a result of the government shutdown, and our team’s ability to reoptimize and grow property direct and group business where available. We continued to see growth in other revenues, which were up 5% on a comparable basis during the quarter and up 6% year to date, driven primarily by parking revenue and cancellation fees. Turning to expenses. Comparable hotels total hotel expenses increased by only 1% in the fourth quarter and 1.9% for the year as compared to the same periods of last year, or 2.5% and 3.3% on a CPOR basis. On a same store basis, total hotel expenses increased by only 1% for both the fourth quarter and full year. Total payroll per occupied room for our same store hotels was $43 for the quarter, up 3.5% to the fourth quarter 2024, and $41 for the full year, up 3% versus full year 2024. Our managers continue to achieve reductions in contract labor, which decreased during the quarter to 7% of total same store wages, down 120 basis points or 14% versus the same period in 2024. Comparable hotels variable hotel expenses increased only 0.5% in the fourth quarter, or 1.9% on a per occupied room basis. Cost control efforts amid occupancy softness kept expense growth muted, with only 80 basis points of comparable operating expense growth, 30 basis points of hotel administrative expense, and flat sales and marketing expenses. Comparable utilities and repair and maintenance expense grew slightly higher at 2% and fixed expenses remained an expected headwind at 7% growth. Our comparable hotels adjusted hotel EBITDA margin was strong at 31.1% for the fourth quarter and 34.3% for the year, down 210 basis points and 190 basis points as compared to the same periods of 2024. Adjusted EBITDAre was approximately $93,000,000 for the quarter, and $444,000,000 for the full year, down approximately 3.6% and 5.1% as compared to the same periods of 2024. MFFO for the quarter was approximately $73,000,000 or $0.31 per share, down 3.1% on a per share basis as compared to the fourth quarter 2024. For the full year 2025, MFFO was approximately $361,000,000 or $1.52 per share, down 5.6% on a per share basis as compared to 2024. Looking at our balance sheet, as of 12/31/2025, we had approximately $1,500,000,000 of total outstanding debt, approximately 3.4 times our trailing twelve months EBITDA, with a weighted average interest rate of 4.7%. At quarter end, our weighted average debt maturities were approximately three years. We had cash on hand of approximately $9,000,000, availability under our revolving credit facility of $587,000,000, and approximately 64% of our total debt outstanding was fixed or hedged. The number of unencumbered hotels in our portfolio as of December 31 was 207. As previously disclosed, in July, we entered into a new $385,000,000 term loan with a maturity date of 07/31/2030, enabling us to stagger our maturities as we approach a recast of our main credit facility in the coming months. Turning to our outlook for 2026, provided in yesterday’s press release, for the full year, we expect net income to be between $133,000,000 and $160,000,000, comparable hotels RevPAR change to be between negative 1% and positive 1%, comparable hotels adjusted hotel EBITDA margin to be between 32.4–33.4%, and adjusted EBITDAre to be between $424,000,000 and $447,000,000. We have assumed, for purposes of guidance, that total hotel expenses will increase by approximately 3% at the midpoint, which is 2% on a CPOR basis. Effective 01/01/2026, the Company will begin excluding from the calculation of adjusted EBITDA and MFFO the expense recorded for share-based compensation, as it represents a noncash transaction, and the add back to net income is consistent with the calculation of adjusted EBITDA for the Company’s financial covenant ratios under its credit facilities and is consistent with the presentation of other public lodging REITs. As Justin mentioned earlier, this outlook aligns with STR forecast for our chain scales, and we believe represents a measured base case scenario for our portfolio, with early summer potentially benefiting from incremental leisure travel related to FIFA World Cup 2026 and easier comparisons to periods adversely by cuts in government spending, tariff announcements, and the government shutdown in late 2025, we acknowledge that this guidance could ultimately prove conservative. Our outlook is based on our current view, which is limited and does not take into account any unanticipated developments in our business or changes in the operating environment, nor does it take into account any unannounced hotel acquisitions or dispositions. Trends early in the year are always difficult to extrapolate, but we are encouraged by recent improvement in midweek occupancies and GDS bookings. While uncertainty remains elevated and the possibility of policy related demand disruption continues, including the ongoing partial government shutdown, we believe our experience, discipline, and agility will enable us to adapt dynamically to maximize profitability. We remain confident in our team’s ability to successfully navigate shifting market conditions. The strength of our differentiated portfolio has proven resilient across economic cycles, allowing us to preserve equity value in challenging environments and position ourselves to capitalize on emerging opportunities. While we have faced economic headwinds this year, favorable supply-demand dynamics persist. Our recent capital allocation decisions and portfolio adjustments have enhanced our portfolio positioning and performance, and our solid balance sheet continues to provide us with stability and meaningful flexibility to pursue accretive opportunities in the future. Importantly, we remain focused on the long term and committed to executing our strategy with discipline and patience, ensuring our portfolio is well positioned to deliver growth and value creation for shareholders over time. That concludes our prepared remarks, and we will now open the call for questions. Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be difficult to hear instructions; please ensure your handset is picked up. And again, that is star one if you would like to ask a question.