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    Tuesday, June 9
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    You are at:Home » The Luxury Hospitality Pivot: Why Legacy Hotel Chains Are Snapping Up Ultra-Premium Private Resorts
    why legacy hotel chains are snapping up ultra-premium private resorts
    why legacy hotel chains are snapping up ultra-premium private resorts
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    The Luxury Hospitality Pivot: Why Legacy Hotel Chains Are Snapping Up Ultra-Premium Private Resorts

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil31 May 2026No Comments4 Mins Read20 Views
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    You can sense a change when you stroll through the lobby of practically any large city hotel. There is a smaller check-in desk. It’s quieter in the lobby. Additionally, executives in a corporate office in McLean or Bethesda no longer give lobbies much thought. Private islands are on their minds.

    That is essentially the narrative of the last two years in the world of upscale hospitality. The industry titans, Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt, planted flags in every market they could penetrate for decades as they pursued scale. On the surface, what they are doing now appears to be the opposite. They are purchasing ultra-premium resorts that are small and remote. fewer rooms. higher walls. a location that can be reached by boat or not at all.

    It would be easy to label this as a fad. It isn’t. The math below is too convincing. The market for luxury hotels was estimated to be worth $121 billion in 2025 and is expected to reach $218 billion in less than ten years. That isn’t a niche’s growth curve. The legacy chains can no longer afford to handle that market as a side project.

    The industry’s covert obsession with a particular type of customer is what’s driving it. According to recent estimates, the number of ultra-high net worth individuals worldwide has surpassed 626,000, and they are not the type of people who would want to share a pool with a conference group. They wish to vanish. A butler who remembers how they take their coffee, a villa with its own plunge pool, and a section of beach that feels, if only momentarily, like theirs. The enemy is crowds. The product is privacy.

    As this develops, it seems as though the chains took a hard lesson from the all-inclusive market. Wristbands, buffet lines, and diluted drinks made those beachside resorts a joke for years. Then Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt moved in, reduced the number of rooms, raised the bar, and made a discovery. As long as the property is good enough to warrant staying, wealthy tourists will pay generously to never leave.

    why legacy hotel chains are snapping up ultra-premium private resorts
    why legacy hotel chains are snapping up ultra-premium private resorts

    In development circles, the model is now known as the destination as the anchor. You don’t stay in the hotel before visiting the location. The location is the hotel. Consider the expansive Barbuda project by Nobu or the wellness campus at Canyon Ranch in Austin, which spans hundreds of acres and is built to ensure that visitors have no reason to stray. Local crafts, architecture, and a private boat ride between facilities. These were once flourishes. They are now the tactic.

    It’s difficult to ignore how much of this resembles a wager from years ago. Bill Gates’ family office paid billions to take over Four Seasons in 2021, when the travel industry was still in ruins. Many people felt that the timing was odd. Hotels were closing. The level of occupancy had collapsed. However, it was patient money playing a long game. The idea was that luxury would always return and do so with great vigor. Yes, it did.

    Additionally, there is a second, less evident motivation that is related to loyalty. Every ultra-premium asset a chain acquires serves as an additional justification for a high-spending member to remain in the ecosystem. Once good for a weekend in a midtown box, your points can now be redeemed for a private villa. The brands understand how valuable it is to keep the wealthiest travelers close.

    However, the question of where the ceiling is remains. The real moat is no longer the marble or the infinity pools—those are table stakes, according to one consultant, who was only half kidding. The people are the problem. employees who are able to anticipate, improvise, and read a guest. Some companies have developed whole frameworks around this notion, claiming that the only things AI cannot replicate are warmth and judgment. That has an almost comforting quality. The most costly hospitality on the planet might still depend on how well someone took care of you.

    It remains to be seen if the chains can provide that on a large scale. If you have the money, purchasing a private island is simple. No acquisition spreadsheet adequately captures the difficulty and slowness of staffing it with individuals who earn $4,000 per night. Investors appear to think that demand will continue. The properties continue to arrive. The boats continue to operate for the time being.

    Luxury Hospitality
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