Because federal government employees purchase a significant quantity of hotel rooms, the General Services Administration (GSA) has partnered with Federal Travel Regulation (FTR) compliant accommodations to provide federal travelers with per diem hotel room rates for select high-volume travel destinations in and outside of the Continental United States. These federal guidelines frequently serve to determine the hotel per diem allowances for state and local government travelers as well.
Using the federal government per diem as guidance, individual properties and hotel chains set special room rates to offer to government travels. Hotel owners and operators have the option to decide who qualifies for a government rate. Depending on the policy of the brand or hotel, qualified government business can range from direct employees of federal, state, and local agencies, to contractors working on behalf a government division.
With a few exceptions, “government business” is a small source of demand in any individual hotel. While the room rate is typically on the lower-end of the pricing schedule, government-related travel can be a relatively stable source of demand, especially during economic recessions when other, more lucrative transient and group travel disappears.
Every year, the GSA reviews the lodging per diems and adjusts them as needed. Adjustments can be made to increase, or lower, the per diem as economic and market conditions dictate. Hoteliers across the country pay attention each year when the new per diem rates are announced, and then assess the impact accordingly.
The Case of Cobb County
To assess how a change in the federal government per diem rates impact a lodging market, CBRE Hotels Research (CBRE) studied the Cobb County, Georgia market. Cobb County was chosen because in August of 2018 the GSA announced that it had designated Cobb County as new Non-Standard Area (NSA). In turn, the government per diem rate for Cobb Country dropped significantly for fiscal year 2019 which began in October 1, 2018.
Prior to 2018, the GSA considered Cobb County as part of the greater Atlanta area along with Fulton and DeKalb Counties. During fiscal year (FY) 2018, the per diem hotel rate for Cobb, Fulton, and DeKalb counties ranged from $148 to $166, depending on the month. In FY 2019, the Cobb County rates dropped to $116 year-round, while the per diem rate for Fulton and DeKalb Counties was adjusted to a range of $152 to $159.
CBRE purchased data from Kalibri Labs that allowed us to isolate the room nights occupied, and revenue paid, by travelers who paid a government rate in Cobb, Fulton, and DeKalb Counties from January 2015 through June 2019.
Analysis
The data on the purchase of room nights are separated into various categories, of which government is one. Exhibit 1 details the levels and percentages (inserted over bars) of total revenue generated in the various channel categories in Cobb County: