Hotel occupancy across parts of the Middle East has fallen to its weakest level since the first phase of Covid-19, as the Iran war disrupts air travel, cuts international demand and pushes hotel operators into emergency cost control.
Data cited by CoStar show Dubai occupancy fell to 22.8% in the week ending 14 March, down from 84.8% in the first two months of 2026, while Abu Dhabi was near 39.5%.
Reuters reported that major hubs, including Dubai, saw severe flight disruption, stranding passengers and damaging confidence in Gulf travel.
The hotel sector entered 2026 from a strong base. Deloitte said the Middle East had started the year with tourism demand still running above pre-pandemic levels, but the conflict quickly changed the outlook.
Oxford Economics now estimates inbound arrivals to the region could fall by 11% to 27% year on year in 2026, depending on how long the disruption lasts.
WTTC said the conflict is already costing the wider travel and tourism sector at least US$600 million a day in international visitor spending.
Air travel shock hits hotel demand
The sharp fall in Middle East hotel occupancy has been driven first by airspace disruption rather than by a slow change in traveller sentiment.
WTTC said Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha and Bahrain normally handle about 526,000 passengers a day, making the region highly exposed when flights are cancelled or rerouted.
Reuters described the breakdown in connectivity as the worst air travel crisis since the pandemic for some regional hubs. For hotels in gateway cities, fewer flights meant fewer guests almost immediately.
Industry data point to a short-lived spike from stranded passengers and repatriation traffic before the downturn deepened. CoStar said repatriation flights and stop-start airspace closures lifted occupancy for several days in some markets, but that temporary demand faded quickly.
Hotel News Resource, citing CoStar data, described a three-phase pattern: seasonal softness during Ramadan, a brief lift from evacuations and stranded travellers, then a sharp fall as travel disruption spread.
That pattern matters for hotel owners and operators because it shows the current downturn is tied closely to regional air connectivity. In a market such as Dubai, where hotels depend heavily on international arrivals, transit passengers and corporate travel, the effect has been immediate.
Ryanair chief executive Michael O’Leary told Reuters there was “a big collapse in bookings to the Middle East”, adding that confidence in Gulf air travel had clearly been damaged.
Dubai leads the downturn
Dubai has become the clearest example of the hotel sector’s exposure to the Iran war. CoStar said the market averaged 81.1% occupancy in 2025 and remained strong at the start of this year, before collapsing to 22.8% in mid-March, its lowest weekly level since April 2020.
Even with a small Eid al-Fitr bounce, occupancy remained far below normal trading levels. Hotel operators have also faced weaker food and beverage sales and pressure on room rates as they try to protect cash flow.
The fallout is broader than one city. Hotel News Resource reported year-on-year declines of up to 70% in Bahrain, while Reuters said the Gulf tourism industry faces a potential visitor spending loss of US$34 billion to US$56 billion this year, depending on the length of the conflict.
Oxford Economics estimated that 23 million to 38 million fewer people could travel to the Middle East in 2026 than previously expected. These forecasts underline how closely hotel performance is linked to regional aviation and traveller confidence.
Not all markets have been hit equally. CoStar said Jeddah held at around 57% occupancy after the first phase of disruption, helped by domestic demand and religious travel linked to Makkah and Medina.
That compares with the much sharper fall in the UAE, where hotel demand is more dependent on international flows. The split suggests that markets with a stronger local demand base may be better placed to withstand short-term geopolitical shocks.
Operators seek relief
Governments and hotel businesses are now focused on liquidity, pricing discipline and guest support.
Skift reported that Dubai has announced an AED 1 billion support package for hotels and tourism businesses, including a three-month deferral of government fees, sales fees and the tourism dirham fee. The aim is to ease cash pressure while inbound travel remains weak.
WTTC said recovery can come quickly after security shocks if governments and industry coordinate clearly. Its chief executive, Gloria Guevara, said the sector’s losses already average “US$600 million per day”, but added that tourism has recovered from previous crises in as little as two months when authorities moved fast to restore confidence.
That is relevant for hotel groups weighing whether the present slump is a short operational shock or a longer demand reset.
For now, the immediate picture for the hotel industry is clear. The Iran war has pushed Middle East hotels, especially Dubai hotels and other internationally exposed markets, into a sudden downturn marked by low occupancy, booking cancellations and pressure on pricing.
Any sustained recovery in hotel demand will depend less on discounting than on the reopening of air routes, the return of stable flight schedules and a wider improvement in traveller confidence across the region.
“Middle East hotels hit pandemic-era lows amid Iran war” was originally created and published by Hotel Management Network, a GlobalData owned brand.
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