top of page

For years, the Philippine hotel story was built around foreign arrivals: Koreans and Japanese filling city hotels, Westerners heading to the islands, and regional tourists hopping in for shopping weekends. In 2026, that story has flipped. International arrivals are still below pre‑pandemic levels, but hotels are surprisingly busy—because domestic tourists have become the real engine of demand.


If you are looking at hotels, condotels, or serviced residences as an investment, you cannot ignore this shift. The winning assets are no longer just those closest to foreign visitor hotspots; they are the ones that serve the spending power of Filipinos themselves.


The Numbers Behind the “Local Tourist” Story


Recent hospitality and tourism reports show a clear pattern: international arrivals are recovering, but they have not yet returned to 2019 levels. Meanwhile, domestic travel has surged, with Filipinos traveling more frequently for leisure, balikbayan visits, work trips, and events.

Consultancies tracking the sector highlight several important points:

  • Domestic travelers continue to drive hotel and MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences, and events) demand across the country, even as foreign arrivals lag.

  • Metro Manila alone is set to add almost 2,900 new hotel keys in 2026, concentrated in Makati and the Bay Area, reflecting developer confidence in sustained demand.

  • Over the next few years, thousands more rooms are expected nationwide, from Metro Manila to Cebu, Palawan, Baguio, Boracay, and Davao, indicating a broader, more diversified hospitality pipeline.

In other words, developers and operators are not building this many rooms because they are betting on tourists who have not yet returned in full. They are building because the domestic market is already here.


Why Domestic Guests Are So Powerful


Domestic tourists behave differently from foreign tourists—and that has real implications for hotel revenues.

First, local travelers are more resilient. They are less affected by global shocks like wars, airline disruptions, or foreign visa rules. Long weekends, school breaks, and seat‑sale culture keep a steady flow of Filipinos moving around the country, even when global travel softens.

Second, domestic guests create repeatable patterns:

  • Family weekend trips to nearby cities and resorts

  • Corporate trainings, conferences, and product launches

  • Events like weddings, reunions, and festivals

These patterns support:

  • Higher occupancy outside peak international seasons

  • Strong demand for function rooms and MICE facilities

  • A more stable base of guests that hotels can nurture with loyalty programs and promos

This is why major research houses are emphasizing domestic tourism as a stabilizer of hotel revenues. It is not as glamorous as record‑breaking foreign visitor numbers, but it is often more dependable.


What This Means for Hotel and Condotel Investors


If you are considering buying into a hotel or condotel project, or acquiring a small hospitality asset, 2026 is a year when you should be looking less at “How many foreigners will come?” and more at “How many Filipinos want to stay here?”

Here are key angles to analyze:


1. Location: Domestic Catchment, Not Just Tourist Postcard

Ask yourself:

  • Is this property within easy reach of large local populations by land or short flights?

  • Does it sit near domestic demand drivers like BPO hubs, universities, convention centers, industrial zones, or government offices?

  • Is the airport or major bus hub accessible enough for balikbayans visiting family and friends?

Locations like Metro Manila, Cebu, Baguio, Palawan, Boracay, and Davao are not just foreign tourist magnets—they are also strong domestic destinations. A hotel that can fill rooms with local staycationers and corporate bookings will have a better cushion when foreign arrivals fluctuate.


2. Product: Flexible Spaces for Local Use

Domestic guests often care about:

  • Room configurations that work for families and barkadas

  • Good Wi‑Fi and work‑friendly areas for “workcation” stays

  • Function rooms and ballroom space for events, from corporate seminars to weddings

For investors, that means projects with:

  • Strong MICE facilities and banquet revenue potential

  • Configurable meeting spaces

  • Thoughtful amenity programming that appeals to locals (F&B concepts, pools, kids’ areas, wellness)

A purely tourist‑oriented design that ignores events and local corporate demand could struggle in a domestic‑driven cycle.


3. Operator and Strategy: Asset‑Light and Brand Power

Consultancy advice to developers has increasingly highlighted “asset‑light” strategies—where international brands enter via management or franchise deals while local partners own the real estate. This has a few key benefits for investors:

  • Lower upfront capital requirements for expansion

  • Access to global reservation systems and loyalty programs, which local tourists increasingly use

  • Better ability to reposition and reprice rooms as domestic and foreign mix evolves

If you are buying into a condotel or hotel project, pay attention to:

  • Who is operating the property

  • How strong the brand is in the domestic market

  • Whether the business model allocates revenues and costs fairly between owners and operator

A strong brand with active local marketing can tap domestic demand more effectively than a no‑name property left to fend for itself on online travel agencies.


Risk Factors You Still Need to Watch

A domestic‑driven hotel story is not risk‑free. Here are some important watchpoints:

  • Oversupply in certain nodes. Metro Manila and some prime resort areas have big pipelines of new rooms. If too many projects open at once, occupancy and rates could come under pressure.

  • Consumer spending power. Domestic demand depends heavily on household budgets. If inflation and interest rates bite too hard, non‑essential travel and staycations can slow.

  • Competition from alternative accommodations. Airbnb, serviced apartments, and smaller boutique stays will continue to compete for local guests, especially price‑sensitive segments.

But the key difference in 2026 is this: even with these risks, domestic demand is strong enough that serious investors cannot ignore it. It is no longer just a “bonus” on top of foreign arrivals; in many markets, it is the main story.


Practical Guidelines for 2026 Hospitality Investors


To turn these trends into an actionable strategy, here are concrete steps you can take:

  1. Map the demand drivers. Look at projects near airports, IT parks, universities, large malls, and convention centers. Cross‑check with tourism statistics and local event calendars.

  2. Stress‑test your projections. Build scenarios where foreign arrivals stay below 2019 levels, but domestic occupancy remains robust. See if the deal still works on those assumptions.

  3. Analyze the room mix and facilities. Favor properties with a balanced mix of standard rooms, suites, and family‑friendly layouts, plus credible MICE capacity.

  4. Evaluate the operator’s local strategy. Ask how the brand plans to market to Filipino travelers: loyalty programs, corporate tie‑ups, social media campaigns, and partnerships with local airlines or banks.

  5. Match investment horizon to the tourism cycle. If you believe foreign arrivals will eventually return in force, target assets that can thrive on domestic demand now and benefit from an upside later, rather than those that barely break even without foreigners.


Domestic tourists are no longer the quiet background of the Philippine hotel industry—they are the main act. For investors, that means shifting from a narrow “international tourism” mindset to a more nuanced, two‑engine view of demand: strong local travel today, with gradual foreign recovery on top.


If you choose locations that Filipinos love, back operators who know how to serve them, and build your numbers around realistic occupancy and rate assumptions, 2026 can be an attractive entry point into hotels and condotels—without having to bet everything on the next wave of foreign arrivals.


 
 
 

Listed property companies in the Philippines are expected to post modest revenue growth this year amid tepid economic expansion and elevated inventory in the office and residential segments, analysts said.


“Revenue trajectory [is] on the way to recovery, but the journey can be challenged by moderating gross domestic product growth this year and the oversupply overhang in some segments like office and high-rise residential,” First Metro Investment Corp. Head of Research Cristina S. Ulang said.


The government has lowered its economic growth target for this year to 5%-6% from the previous 6%-7% range set for 2026 to 2028.


This came after a corruption scandal involving flood control projects dampened government spending and consumer confidence in the latter half of 2025.


Ms. Ulang also cited the oversupply of office and vertical residential units in some areas, which could weigh on listed developers’ revenue growth.


The Metro Manila office market has about 2.7 million square meters of vacant supply, while 80,300 condominium units remain unsold in the region, according to Leechiu Property Consultants’ fourth-quarter property market report.


Unicapital Securities, Inc. Research Head Wendy B. Estacio-Cruz said modest revenue growth is expected this year as the sector has yet to fully recover from tempered demand following a prolonged period of high interest rates.


In December, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) cut policy rates by 25 basis points (bps) to a more than three-year low of 4.5%. This marked the BSP’s fifth consecutive 25-bp reduction, bringing total rate cuts to 200 bps since August 2024.


BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. recently signaled that the Monetary Board is nearing the end of its easing cycle.


However, Ms. Estacio-Cruz said interest rates remain relatively elevated and may continue to weigh on housing affordability, particularly in the mid- to mass-market segments.


Rising land, construction, and financing costs may also delay project launches, she added.


“Leasing assets in prime locations should remain resilient, while upper-mid to high-end residential projects are likely to drive sales, given their relative resistance to interest rate pressures,” Ms. Estacio-Cruz said.


As a result, developers are expected to rebalance their revenue mix this year, analysts said.


The country’s industrial and logistics sector also presents revenue opportunities for listed firms, particularly amid the growth of e-commerce, data centers, and cold storage facilities, First Grade Finance, Inc. Managing Director Astro C. del Castillo said.


Developers with hospitality and retail assets may also post steady profits, he said, supported by an influx of local and international events scheduled this year.


Sy-led SM Prime Holdings, Inc. reported a 10% increase in net income to P37.2 billion for the first nine months of 2025.


Ayala Land, Inc.’s nine-month profit rose slightly to P21.4 billion from P21.2 billion a year earlier.


Robinsons Land Corp. posted a 2% increase in attributable net income to P10.17 billion for the period.


Megaworld Corp. recorded a 16% rise in attributable net income to P15.93 billion.

Federal Land, Inc. posted a 6% increase in nine-month reservation sales, while Filinvest Land, Inc. reported a 5% rise in consolidated net income to P3.64 billion.


Century Properties Group, Inc. saw its nine-month net income climb 17% to P2.1 billion, while DoubleDragon Corp.’s consolidated net income edged up to P2.55 billion.


Cebu Landmasters, Inc. posted a 6% increase in consolidated net income to P3.1 billion, while Vista Land & Lifescapes, Inc. recorded a 4% rise to P9.46 billion for the first nine months of 2025.


Rockwell Land Corp. posted a 13.1% increase in consolidated net income to P3.5 billion as of end-September, while Sta. Lucia Land, Inc.’s net income fell 38% to P2.05 billion during the period.


“In our view, topline performance will be supported by improving leasing conditions, a gradual recovery in residential sales, and the increasing contribution of recurring income streams,” Ms. Estacio-Cruz said.


 
 
 
  • Writer: Ziggurat Realestatecorp
    Ziggurat Realestatecorp
  • Nov 18, 2023
  • 1 min read

The Department of Tourism (DoT) said the tourism industry generated P404.02 billion in revenue in the first 10 months, after over 4.63 million foreign tourists visited the Philippines.


Tourism revenue for the period grew 190% from a year earlier, it said.


The international visitors are equivalent to “96% of our target,” Tourism Secretary Esperanza Christina G. Frasco said, adding that projected revenue over the full year is $7 billion.


Ms. Frasco was speaking at the 2023 Philippine Economic Briefing in California.


This year, the DoT is targeting 4.8 million international arrivals. Last year, the industry generated the equivalent of 6.2% of gross domestic product.


Ms. Frasco said the key to unlocking tourism’s potential is addressing challenges in infrastructure, connectivity and digitalization.


“We have engaged in a collaboration with the Department of Public Works and Highways for the purpose of continuing the tourism road infrastructure program. As a result of that, over 158 kilometers of tourism roads have been constructed or rehabilitated this year, with more to come in 2024 and in succeeding years,” she said at a panel discussion.


She added that DoT is also collaborating with the Department of Transportation not only for hard infrastructure investment but also for human capital development.


“We have trained frontline tourism workers in our airports and seaports in the Filipino Brand of Service Excellence. This program, as a whole, has trained over 111,000 workers across the tourism value chain,” Ms. Frasco said.


Meanwhile, she said the department is also counting on the construction of five cruise terminals in the coming year.


 
 
 

© Copyright 2018 by Ziggurat Real Estate Corp. All Rights Reserved.

  • Facebook Social Icon
  • Instagram
  • Twitter Social Icon
  • flipboard_mrsw
  • RSS
bottom of page