Login

Smaller Southeastern metropolitan areas emerge as hotel hot spots

Population inflows, job gains are steering builders toward unexpected markets
The 390-room Riding Academy Hotel opened in Ocala, Florida, on the World Equestrian Center campus. (CoStar)
The 390-room Riding Academy Hotel opened in Ocala, Florida, on the World Equestrian Center campus. (CoStar)
CoStar Analytics
April 15, 2026 | 1:48 P.M.

Hotel developers tend to follow people. When more residents move into an area — bringing jobs, spending and economic activity with them — demand often rises for places to stay. That’s why, in the years after the pandemic, new hotels have increasingly been built not just in big cities, but in smaller and mid-sized communities across the Southeast.

This news story is available exclusively to CoStar subscribers.

Watch the video to learn how you can access industry leading CRE news and the data analytics you need to drive success.

This news story is available exclusively to CoStar subscribers.

Ready to Learn More?

Sign Up For a Personalized Demo.

Sign Up For a Demo To Learn More.

Already A Subscriber? Sign In

IN THIS ARTICLE


News | Smaller Southeastern metropolitan areas emerge as hotel hot spots