Hotel Conversions vs New Construction: Why Brands Are Betting on Existing Buildings in 2026

Two large yellow tower cranes rising above a high-rise building construction site with extensive scaffolding against a clear blue sky.

A record share of the rooms opening around the world this year never broke ground — they changed a sign instead. That shift moves the payback clock, the competitive set, and the brand-affiliation decision onto a very different timeline for the executives managing what happens next.

1. The Pipeline Tipped Toward Conversions — Then Eased


CategoryQ4 2025Q1 2026
Total U.S. pipeline6,146 projects / 720,089 rooms6,020 projects / 705,825 rooms
Under construction1,088 / 134,3801,071 / 132,016
Scheduled to start within 12 months2,175 / 253,7502,164 / 249,465
Early planning2,883 / 331,9592,785 / 324,344
Brand conversions1,497 / 148,981 — record high; +12%/+16% YoY1,461 / 141,971 — +3%/+4% YoY vs. Q1 2025, below Q4 2025 peak
Combined conversions + renovations2,118 / 278,628 — record high2,041 / 258,665
Luxury segment (the exception)95 / 22,045 — record high102 / 25,527 — record high; +16%/+23% YoY

Conversions and renovations are project types that cut across the stage categories above, not an additional stage — they are not additive to the total pipeline figures. Sources: Lodging Econometrics, Q4 2025 U.S. Hotel Construction Pipeline Trend Report, January 2026 and Q1 2026 U.S. Hotel Construction Pipeline Trend Report, April 2026.

For an operator, the consequence lands squarely on competitive-supply forecasting. A ground-up hotel gives the comp set eighteen months or more of visible warning — a crane, a permit filing, a groundbreaking party. A conversion can go from signed franchise agreement to open doors in a single quarter. That compresses the lead time a revenue manager has to model a new competitor into next year’s RevPAR and rate-shopping strategy, even though total room count in a market may be rising more slowly than headline pipeline figures suggest, since a converted hotel was already selling rooms under its old name.

2. Why the Payback Clock Runs Faster Without a Permit


3. A Franchise Flag for Almost Any Existing Address


CompanyConversion shareSource
Marriott International~33% of organic room signings and gross room additionsMarriott Q4/FY2025 earnings release
IHG Hotels & Resorts52% of room openings; 40% of room signingsIHG Full Year 2025 Results
Choice Hotels International~80% of 2025 openings guided from conversionsChoice Hotels Q3 2025 supplemental (SEC Form 8-K)

Each figure is drawn from that company’s own disclosed results and is not directly comparable across firms, since definitions of “conversion” and reporting periods vary.

For an owner sitting on a dated but structurally sound building, this proliferation is genuine negotiating leverage: multiple brands are competing for the same signature, which affects royalty rates and, more importantly, the property-improvement-plan requirements attached to the deal. For the operator on the other side of the comp set, the consequence is that competitive supply can now arrive pre-loaded with a global loyalty program and revenue-management infrastructure from day one — a materially sharper threat than a slow-ramping new build with no brand recognition. What’s worth watching is brand dilution: with IHG alone now running 21 brands and its peers running comparably large portfolios, the differentiation a guest actually perceives between soft brands narrows, and PIP costs on an older building can still be substantial enough to erode the headline speed advantage — a property-by-property diligence question rather than a category-wide given.

4. Faster Openings Aren’t the Same as Faster Demand


5. Whether the Preference Survives Cheaper Debt


For an executive weighing a multi-year brand affiliation or a development pipeline built around conversion economics, the practical consequence is that the bet is not risk-free in either direction. If the preference is genuinely structural, as IHG argues, owners who committed early to conversion-friendly brands hold a durable advantage in speed to revenue and lender comfort. If it is instead a detour that snaps back once the Federal Reserve cuts further, the new-build supply currently held back by cost and financing could arrive in a compressed window, changing the competitive-supply math faster than pipeline data alone would suggest today. What’s worth watching from here is less any single company’s guidance and more two threads together: the Fed’s rate path against the still-declining rooms-under-construction trendline, and whether luxury new-build stays the exception, or becomes the leading edge of a broader reversal.


Data Source