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Friday, March 06, 2015

WHO'S PAYING WHO OFF? At Hotels in America's Priciest Cities, You Pay for the View

Travelers to California, Hawaii and Florida saw the highest hotel rates for the first half of 2014, with all but five of the top 20 cities in those popular vacation spots experiencing price increases from 2013.

The priciest place to spend the night in a hotel? Visitors to Newport Coast, California, an affluent community 50 miles south of Los Angeles, paid $519 a night for the first half of 2014, a 9 percent increase from $477 a night during the same time in 2013, according to the latest Hotels.com Hotel Price Index.

Cities on the coast or islands made up 17 of 20 spots on the list. Here are the top 10 U.S. cities where travelers paid the most for the first half of last year, followed by nightly price for a hotel room and percentage increase or decrease from 2013:
Newport Coast, California: $519, +9 percent.
Wailea, Hawaii's island of Maui: $448, -3 percent.
Oahu, Hawaii: $438, +3 percent.
Yountville, California's Napa Valley: $418, +5 percent.
Rancho Palos Verdes, Caifornia: $407, +9 percent.
Duck Key, Florida: $382, +18 percent.
Bal Harbour, Florida: $371, +24 percent.
Princeville, Hawaii's island of Kauai: $368, +18 percent.
Sausalito, California: $358, -4 percent.
St. Helena, California's Napa Valley: $348, -8 percent.

Bal Harbour had the highest price increase, at 24 percent, followed by prices up 19 percent in Paradise Valley, Arizona; and up 18 percent in Princeville, Hawaii, and two Florida spots: Duck Key and Key West.

Most Expensive Domestic Markets

Those are the highest prices for U.S. cities. Some domestic markets, however, are still costly but not as much as the cities listed above. Honolulu, for example, led a list of domestic markets where U.S. travelers paid the most for a hotel -- with an average of $236, 3 percent more than in 2013 --- but it's still a lot less than other resort areas in Hawaii.

San Francisco saw the biggest increase in hotel prices among domestic markets, rising 10 percent to $179 a night, which Hotels.com says could be attributed to a new spring tourism campaign.

Other expensive domestic markets for U.S. travelers were: New York City at $221 a night, up 4 percent; Boston and Miami-Ft. Lauderdale, up 6 percent to $187; and Salisbury, Maryland, up 3 percent to $171.

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4 comments:

  1. There isn't a room in Salisbury that's worth $171/night.

    Not even the Hampton Inn.

    But this is probably all about the phony discount pricing like you see at Kohl's, etc. A very high initial price that nobody in their right mind would pay, then the REAL price represented as a big discount off the 'normal' rate.

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  2. Looks like we are the cheapest so I suppose we will see a big influx of world travelers.

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  3. Supply and demand. Not many hotels in Salisbury, and Im sure OC is having an impact on these prices.

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  4. On a clear day from an upstairs room at the hotel across from PRMC you can see the WWTP. Given what it cost, has to be worth $171 and change!

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