King Charles's coronation: London hotels hike prices by 60 per cent

London hotels hike prices by 60 per cent for King Charles’s coronation on May 6 with early bookers facing £254-a-night bills

  • Prices have increased by £100 compared with last year, according to Trivago
  • But data shows travellers may be shunning London on the day of the coronation

London’s hotels have ramped up their prices by nearly two thirds for the King’s coronation, an accommodation search website has revealed.

Trivago chief executive Axel Hefer said the group has seen hotel prices in the capital jump by 60 per cent year on year for King Charles’s coronation day on May 6.  

Accommodation search website Trivago has revealed that London hotels have ramped up their prices by nearly two-thirds for the King’s coronation.

Prices will hit £254 a night for early bookers, compared with £154 a night for the same day last year.

But as hotels look to increase prices to capitalise on the expected surge in visitors for King Charles’s coronation, Trivago said booking trends suggest many visitors may be shunning London on the day of the ceremony. 

London hotel prices will hit £254 a night for early bookers, compared with £154 a night for the same day last year, according to Trivago 

The company’s booking data shows the search share for London on the day of the coronation is lower than the weekend before and the one after. 

Searches for London are also down 8 per cent compared with the same day last year.  

Trivago said ‘given the very high prices, people would rather avoid traveling to the UK capital on the day of the coronation.’

Mr Hefer added while coronation day is an outlier in terms of prices this year, the group is seeing hotel prices continue to rise generally across the board.

He said hotel prices are rising by low single digits to high single digits this year, on top of increased prices in 2022.

Travellers are combatting the higher prices by switching to cheaper destinations, such as Istanbul, Morocco and Portugal, as well as domestic staycationing, while also beginning to book shorter stays.

The company has also seen trends of holidaymakers opting for lower star ratings on hotels and cheaper accommodation to help bring down costs. 

Mr Hefer said people are unlikely to ditch holidays altogether in 2023 despite soaring cost pressures, following years of Covid travel restrictions.

He said: ‘People will still go on vacation and have a break, but they will try and do it more cheaply. 

‘It is highly likely that the travel market will be up this year, but the question is by how much.

‘By what extent will people compensate for the current price increases by down-trading?’

Trivago said booking trends suggest many visitors may be shunning London on the day of the ceremony

His comments came after Germany-based Trivago, which is majority-owned by Expedia, reported annual results showing it slumped to a net loss of £112.9 million against profits of £9.5 million in 2021.

The loss for the Chelsea Football Club sponsor comes after it was hit by a fine in Australia, impairment charges in the first half of 2022, and the absence of a Government Covid subsidy that it was handed in 2021.

It said this was partly offset by the recovery of travel demand, with revenues surging 48% last year.

This has continued into 2023, with referral revenues up 34% in January, although this compares with winter 2022, which was affected by Omicron variant travel restrictions across much of Europe.

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